THE GUILLOTINES takes place during the
Qing Dynasty where the Chinese Emperor uses mysterious assassins known as Guillotines to get rid of political rivals and squash
rebellion. Now the same assassins are too known as a force of oppression and
plans are set in place to get rid of what is known as a stain on the Empire and bring along the golden Age where the new weapon
are firearms and cannons. The Guillotines are sent out on a mission to take out
the rebel leader known as the Wolf and bring back the body of one of their own (who has been taken prisoner when Wolf escaped
his own execution). The assassins are orphans who are taught to kill, but
they aren’t allowed to read and write. This mission will be full of betrayal
as an old friend (of one of the assassins) is ordered to carry out the orders of the new regime to bring about the new order
of things at any cost. The Same assassin’s world is turned upside
down as he must decide where he must stand in this rebellion.
THE GUILLOTINES has lots of well stage
action and a good story that does falter a bit in the last twenty minutes. Andrew
Lau has put together a well directed film with lots of attention to detail.
SPECIAL FEATURES:
Interviews with director Andrew Lau, the
costume designer Dora Ng, and four of the actors: Ethan Juan (Leng), Shawn Yue (Haido), Boran Jing (Shisan), and Li Yochun
(Mussen). The actors talk about the demands the roles had on them and how Andrew
Lau was a great director while Lau comments on why the film had to be converted to 3D (I saw it on DVD in 2D). The costume designed tells us how modern day special forces uniforms and haircuts helped inspire the looks
for the Guillotines.
The making-of featurette is more of a promotional
piece that has interviews with cast and the director as it shows footage from the movie and some behind-the-scenes footage
which only scratches the surface of how the movie was made.
Theatrical trailer and previews for other
releases from Well Go USA
FINAL ANALYSIS: THE GUILLOTINES is an enjoyable Asian martial arts film except for falling apart in the last 20 minutes.
This DVD review is (c)8-23-2013 David
Blackwell and cannot be reprinted without permission. Send all comments to feedback@enterline-media.com
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