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Let the Bullets Fly

  NR HD

Unknown

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Plot Summary

STILL IN THEATRES! It's the era of the Chinese warlords in the 1920s, and the new governor of Goosetown (Feng Xiaogang) is taking the train into town with his wife (Carina Lau) and right hand man Tang (Ge You). However, a handful of bandits led by Pocky Zhang (Jiang Wen) want to capture the train, and the explosion they set proves bigger than they expected and the new governor is killed. Pocky realizes no one in Goosetown has seen the new governor, so he decides to take his place, and the wife and Tang are forced to play along. Meanwhile in Goosetown, Huang (Chow Yun-Fat) is a powerful criminal who deals in slaves and opium; he's convinced one of his many enemies will kill him, so he employed a simple-minded local man who looks exactly like him (also played by Chow Yun-Fat) to serve as his decoy. When Pocky arrives in town, he goes out of his way to make friends with his new "constituents," and Huang sees he has a powerful rival for the loyalties of the community. The rivalry between Pocky and Huang escalates into a shooting war, though Huang doesn't know Pocky isn't the real governor and Pocky doesn't realize there's more than one Huang. Let The Bullets Fly was a massive box office success in China, becoming the top-grossing domestic release of all time upon its release in 2010.

Rotten Tomatoes Movie Reviews

TOMATOMETER

72%
  • Reviews Counted: 29
  • Fresh: 21
  • Rotten: 8
  • Average Rating: 6.1/10

Top Critics' Reviews

Rotten: At least 30 minutes and several scams too long, the plot passes from amusing to confounding long before the final double-cross. – Jeannette Catsoulis, New York Times, Mar 1, 2012

Fresh: A rollicking, violent, Western-cum-comedy that serves many masters, but adds up to an entertaining hot pot of wry political commentary and general mischief. – John Anderson, Variety, Apr 27, 2011

Fresh: A rollicking Chinese western directed with cinematic gumption. – Maggie Lee, Hollywood Reporter, Apr 27, 2011

Fresh: Comedy and shifting-allegiances intrigue more than compensate for the dearth of rousing action in this 1920s-set film... – Nick Schager, Village Voice, Feb 28, 2012

Read More About This Movie On Rotten Tomatoes

Customer Reviews

You probably wont like it, the action category and bullets in the title are deceptive

This movie is full of over acting, word play, and jokes that dont work with translations at all. It wasnt funny to me but it is odd and goofy so it should be in comedy because theres no fighting or action that I saw. Its just a bunch of people lying to eachother while plotting their own schemes. Its interesting enough to keep you watching and is alright for a once over, its not a bad tale, but personally I wouldnt buy it. Also beware, some of the subtitles are rediculously fast. And there is a scene of gore which was the oddest and most uncalled for event in the movie.

Best, Best Chinese Film in years, and for years to come

Based on the reviews, and reviews on other Chinese movies, it seems like the English speaking world only expects martial art/ Kong fu movies from China, if you are of the stereotypes who only expects stereotype movies from China, steer clear of this one. In order to understand the dark humor, and political innuendos, you need to be familiar with Chinese culture and history, if not Chinese yourself. And yes, the translation is terrible, not helping the spread of this extraordinary movie. But as a hippy Chinese I can tell you, this is definitely not one of the tacky, annoying and sentimentalist movies that come out of the giant crap machine of Chinese movie industry. Compared to Jiangwen, Jackie Chan, Bruce Lee and all the other "internationally acclaimed Chinese movies stars" are just circus clowns. All in all, you need to be very informative of Chinese culture to be able to understand this movie.

Not worth the money

Too long, no martial art involved. Not very funny either

Let the Bullets Fly
View In iTunes
  • $7.99
  • Genre: Action & Adventure
  • Released: 2011

Customer Ratings