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The Last Emperor (1987)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:43
Fresh:39
Rotten:4
Average Rating:7.9/10
Consensus: While decidedly imperfect, Bernardo Bertolucci's epic is still a feast for the eyes.
Synopsis: Although it is 160 minutes long and shot with breathtaking scope and sumptuousness, Bernardo Bertolucci's film is a story about claustrophobia. Pu Yi, the Manchurian emperor of China who ascended... Although it is 160 minutes long and shot with breathtaking scope and sumptuousness, Bernardo Bertolucci's film is a story about claustrophobia. Pu Yi, the Manchurian emperor of China who ascended the throne in 1908 at the age of three, is a prisoner in the palace he rules over. Outside, real power changes hands with each coup d'etat. Pu Yi grows to manhood, is tutored by a Westerner (Peter O'Toole), and marries a gorgeous princess (Joan Chen). However, the adult Pu Yi (John Lone) is destined for a communist reeducation camp when the war is over. From start to finish, Pu Yi is a passive antihero who can never come to grips with the idea that the absolute power conferred on him as a child was only a mirage. The mistakes Pu Yi made trying to realize that power, especially collaborating with the Japanese during the war, provide Bertolucci with the chance to explore his familiar theme of collaboration and its moral consequences (as he did in THE CONFORMIST and 1900). In the end, Pu Yi seems to have reached a kind of peace, and the terrible waste of a special man's life disappears into a drab, grey-clad Beijing. [More]
Starring: John Lone, Joan Chen, Peter O'Toole, Dennis Dun
Starring: John Lone, Joan Chen, Peter O'Toole, Dennis Dun, Victor Wong, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa
Director: Bernardo Bertolucci
Director: Bernardo Bertolucci
Screenwriter: Mark Peploe
Reviews for The Last Emperor
Both an eye-opening epic and an intimate portrait of a man who never really tastes the joys of freedom.
Provides good info on its subject matter, but does so without emotional engaging its audience.
The Last Emperor is like an elegant travel brochure. It piques the curiosity. One wants to go. Ultimately it's a let-down.
...a big, beautiful film that suffers only from an indifferent transfer to DVD. ...its human drama and sheer spectacle manage to catch and hold our attention.
The grand spectacle of life in the Forbidden City (where scenes were actually filmed) is the movie's unforgettable centerpiece.
While it is a long film with slower moments, the parallel personal and political stories are compelling enough to keep the viewer interested throughout.
The best I can say for it is that it is a smart epic, and I think it will age very well.
One of those irresistible movie entertainments that works on so many different levels and offers so much for the senses to savor that it is likely to intimidate some people even more than it did 11 years ago.
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