Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon review

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Flying kung fu warriors, evil witches, reckless Mongol horsemen and cratefuls of exotic hand-to-hand weapons - while being the staples of traditional kung fu movies, they're not what you'd expect to see in an arthouse pic. Yet in the hands of genre-jumping director Ang Lee, the pretty-pretty world of fringe cinema crunches straight into hardcore chop-socky to produce a film that has, quite rightly, been labelled the first "martial arthouse" movie.

The remarkable achievement is that it doesn't compromise either of these seemingly incompatible genres. Take a stopwatch to this and The Matrix, and Crouching Tiger wins by having longer, more varied and arguably better fight scenes. The combination of seamless wire work and the characters' flying abilities (explanation?They just can) produces chases and fights that swoop across courtyards, up walls and even teeter on the swaying tips of bamboo trees.

With more action than all the Lethal Weapons combined and more heart-swelling humanity than The English Patient, Crouching Tiger manages to please all of the people, all of the time. Miss it and you're avoiding cinema at its very best.

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Platform"Xbox","PS2"
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