Hidden Blade

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Hidden Blade
Theatrical release poster
Simplified Chinese无名
Traditional Chinese無名
Literal meaningAnonymous ("Without Name")
Directed byEr Cheng
Written byEr Cheng
Produced byYu Dong
Starring
CinematographyCai Tao, Liao Hui
Edited byEr Cheng
Production
companies
Polybona Films
Cutting Edge Pictures
Distributed byPolybona Films
China Film Co.
Huaxia Film
Alibaba Pictures
Release dates
  • January 22, 2023 (2023-01-22) (China)
  • February 17, 2023 (2023-02-17) (US/Canada)
Running time
128 minutes
CountryChina
LanguagesMandarin
Shanghainese
Japanese
Cantonese
Box office$139.1 million[1]

Hidden Blade is a 2023 Chinese World War II espionage thriller directed by Er Cheng and starring Tony Leung and Wang Yibo.[2] The film was released in China on January 22, 2023 (Chinese New Year).[3] The film has grossed $139 million worldwide, making it temporarily the tenth highest-grossing film of 2023.

Premise[edit]

The film takes place during the War of Resistance, detailing the espionage that resulted in the end of Japanese occupation and the rise of China's Communist Party.

Scenes of the movie cut between flashbacks and flashforwards and center around three characters during Japan's occupation of China: Director He (Leung), Mr. Ye (Yibo), and Officer Watanabe (Mori).

Plot[edit]

A flashback shows a young man who goes by He (Tony Leung) witnessing the final bombing of Guangzhou in 1938 in a makeshift mine alongside other survivors.

Shortly before the bombing of Pearl Harbor in 1941, the man rose through the ranks to become the director of Shanghai's Political Security Department, a counterespionage division overseen by Officer Watanabe. Despite showing loyalty to the Wang Jingwei regime, Director He secretly works for the Chinese Communist Party alongside his wife Ms. Chen (Zhou Xun). Together, they provide information to the underground network as a means of destroying Japanese occupation via espionage. Ms. Chen works alongside the party's secretary Mr. Zhang (Huang Lei) and the former corresponds with her husband via pastries from a local bakery. As a supposedly loyal worker, Director He diligently performs his tasks of assassinating, interrogating, and torturing as a means of gaining Officer Watanabe's trust.

Among Officer Watanabe's inner circle is Minister Tang (Da Peng), Captain Wang (Eric Wang), and a young officer named Mr. Ye (Wang Yibo). Officer Watanabe is ambitious, believing he should do what he can to gain political power through the puppet government, yet suspicious of his men's intentions. After secretly saving communist spy Ms. Jiang (Shuying) after she failed to assassinate Minister Tang, Director He is given information regarding important Japanese individuals such as a Japanese Prince currently serving within the military.

Peace negotiations were initially planned between Japan and the Chiang regime, which would redeploy Japanese forces to fight against the Soviet Union and allow the Chiang regime to continue fighting the Chinese Communist Party at the cost of (de facto) ceding Manchuria. With the newfound information, the Chinese Communist Party ambushes and assassinates the Japanese Prince and his brigade during their last excursion. The event causes Japan to break off negotiations and the death of the prince compromises Officer Watanabe's reputation.

Mr. Ye's lover Ms. Fang (Zhang Jingyi), a dancer and member of the Chinese Communist Party, helps assassinate Minister Tang and breaks off her relationship with Mr. Ye, who angrily takes it out on random Japanese soldiers. He later finds out that Captain Wang raped and killed her due to her political affiliation and Captain Wang mysteriously disappears soon after. Officer Watanabe becomes more suspicious of Director He after discovering he was cousins with Minister Tang and decides to use Mr. Ye as his double agent. The attack on Pearl Harbor is announced and the Wang Jingwei regime declares war on Great Britain and the United States, causing Shanghai to be completely occupied by the Japanese military. Mr. Ye becomes closer to Watanabe, who now wants to further his political ambitions with the former's help.

Mr. Zhang fears the worst for himself and attempts to run away with Ms. Chen before discovering she was married the whole time. Only working for the Chinese Communist Party for money and possible peace, he decides to turn himself into Shanghai's Political Security Department. Mr. Zhang unknowingly reports the Chinese Communist Party's activities to Director He, who kills him, and visits his wife to check on her. Officer Watanabe orders Mr. Ye to take down Director He, and a bloody fight between the two ensues at Ms. Chen's apartment. Mr. Ye returns to Officer Watanabe heavily injured but reports that Director He was arrested and Ms. Chen was killed. Officer Watanabe rewards Mr. Ye by making him his new secretary and showing the latter a map of territories and intel that would help strengthen Japan's occupation of China via Manchuria. The two head to Manchuria to start their new political and military careers.

Director He is disguised as a political prisoner but is released soon after the Japanese surrender in 1945. As he leaves the prison, he sees a prison truck enter that includes Officer Watanabe and Mr. Ye among the incoming prisoners. Mr. Ye silently mocks Director He as the truck drives through the gates and Officer Watanabe laughs when Director He tries to retaliate. In the prison's washroom, Officer Watanabe tells Mr. Ye that he is no longer motivated to pursue any political power now that Manchuria is no longer under Japanese occupation, and wonders how Manchuria fell despite it being the best stronghold for Japan. He also contemplates starting a new life from scratch as a farmer, attempts to take off his uniform in defeat, and says both would be granted immunity despite the crimes they committed. Mr. Ye, however, stops him and implies that Officer Watanabe should die as a Japanese officer.

It is revealed that Mr. Ye was double-crossing Officer Watanabe the whole time. At Director He's orders, Mr. Ye intentionally gained Officer Watanabe's trust and was working as a double agent for the Chinese Communist Party. Mr. Ye explains that Manchuria fell because of the information Officer Watanabe gave him in exchange for supposedly killing Ms. Chen and arresting Director He. Mr. Ye then kills Officer Watanabe with Director He's knife before cleaning and returning the blade to its owner. Director He, waiting in the nearby office, thanks Mr. Ye for his hard work and efforts.

The movie reveals Ms. Chen was alive the whole time and she, Director He, and Mr. Ye are living unassuming lives in 1946 Hong Kong. Mr. Ye secretly buys coffee for Ms. Chen at a cafe before visiting a restaurant run by Captain Wang's family. Captain Wang's parents reveal that they escaped Shanghai after their son's disappearance and believes their son is still alive in China. Mr. Ye leaves to avoid further suspicion from Captain Wang's sister and he visits a nearby temple, running into Director He as he prays. Director He ultimately returns to Shanghai to see the bakery through which he corresponded with his wife still running and reminisces about how his life came to be.

The movie cuts back to Captain Wang confessing to Mr. Ye about Ms. Fang's death. Initially never trusting Mr. Ye, Captain Wang attempts to shoot him but discovers that the latter had removed all the bullets from the gun. Mr. Ye then confesses that he is a Communist all along working for the Chinese Communist Party. Captain Wang is then killed by Mr. Ye, explaining the former's apparent disappearance.

Cast[edit]

Director of Shanghai's Political Security Department for the Wang Jingwei regime.
Officer and subbordinate of Director He.
  • Zhou Xun as Ms. Chen (special appearance)
Wife of Director He. Member of the Communist Party.
Roommate of Ms. Chen. Works as a Secretary for the Communist Party. Attempted to change sides out of fear.
  • Hiroyuki Mori as Officer Watanabe
Japanese official overseeing Shanghai's Political Security Department. A devoted follower of General Ishiwara's faction and ambitious for political power.
Minister for Shanghai's Political Security Department. Cousin of Director He. Loyal to Wang Jingwei regime.
Captain within Shanghai's Political Security Department. Loyal to the Wang Jingwei regime.
Member of the Communist Party. Attempted to assassinate Minister Tang and supposedly executed.
Dancer and former lover of Mr. Ye. Member of the Communist Party.

Production[edit]

Hidden Blade is produced by Polybona Films as the third installment in its "China Victory Trilogy", following Chinese Doctors (2021) and The Battle at Lake Changjin (2021).[4][5] It is written and directed by Cheng Er, best known for Lethal Hostage (2012) and The Wasted Times (2016).[2] Filming began in Shanghai in August 2021 and completed in December of the same year.[6] On casting, Tony Leung agreed to the project because he found Cheng Er's previous work interesting. Cheng Er also stated that Wang Yibo was his only choice for the second leading role.[7]

In February 2022, the production team released a teaser trailer with two men conversing in Shanghainese,[8] spawning rumors that the entire film would be in the dialect. It prompted the film to release an official poster clarifying that there will also be "Mandarin, Cantonese, and foreign language".[9] A longer trailer was released in September 2022.[10]

The film originally targeted an August 2022 release date,[11] but moved to January 2023 to take advantage of the Chinese New Year release window.[12]

Awards and nominations[edit]

Award Category Recipients and Nominees Result
36th Golden Rooster Awards Best Feature Film Nominated
Best Screenplay Er Cheng Nominated
Best Director Er Cheng Won
Best Actor Tony Leung Won
Best Supporting Actor Wang Yibo Nominated
Best Cinematography Cai Tao, Liao Hui Nominated
Best Art Sun Li Nominated
Best Editing Er Cheng Won

References[edit]

  1. ^ "China Boxoffice". The Numbers. Archived from the original on 27 March 2023. Retrieved 1 April 2023.
  2. ^ a b Davis, Rebecca (2021-12-23). "Tony Leung Chiu-Wai Chinese-Propaganda Blockbuster Eyes 2022 Release". Variety. Archived from the original on 2023-01-06. Retrieved 2023-01-06.
  3. ^ 新浪娱乐 (2023-01-01). "谍战电影《无名》定档大年初一 梁朝伟王一博主演|无名|王一博|梁朝伟_新浪娱乐_新浪网". ent.sina.com.cn. Archived from the original on 2023-01-06. Retrieved 2023-01-06.
  4. ^ "博纳影业推出"中国胜利三部曲"-新华网". www.xinhuanet.com. Archived from the original on 2023-01-06. Retrieved 2023-01-06.
  5. ^ Soo, J. X. (2022-09-29). "Hong Kong submits Tony Leung-starring crime thriller 'Where the Wind Blows' for the Oscars". NME. Archived from the original on 2023-01-06. Retrieved 2023-01-06.
  6. ^ "程耳导演谍战片《无名》杀青,梁朝伟王一博致敬英雄-新华网". www.xinhuanet.com. Archived from the original on 2023-01-06. Retrieved 2023-01-06.
  7. ^ "《无名》发布"超级商业片"双预告,梁朝伟王一博领衔演绎眼神杀-半岛网". yule.bandao.cn. Archived from the original on 2023-01-08. Retrieved 2023-01-08.
  8. ^ "程耳执导电影《无名》曝光首支预告 王一博王传君上海话对白尽显黑色幽默_影片_观众_地下". www.sohu.com. Archived from the original on 2023-01-06. Retrieved 2023-01-06.
  9. ^ 新浪娱乐 (2023-01-05). "《无名》官博辟谣全片上海话:也有普通话广东话|无名_新浪娱乐_新浪网". ent.sina.com.cn. Archived from the original on 2023-01-06. Retrieved 2023-01-06.
  10. ^ "程耳导演《无名》发布全新预告 梁朝伟王一博特工对决暗流涌动_博纳影业集团 | 电影发行 | 电影投资". www.bonafilm.cn. Archived from the original on 2023-01-06. Retrieved 2023-01-06.
  11. ^ Singh, Surej (2021-12-23). "Tony Leung's next film, 'Anonymous', targetted for August 2022 release". NME. Archived from the original on 2023-01-06. Retrieved 2023-01-06.
  12. ^ "梁朝偉、劉嘉玲《無名》海報藏玄機 台灣賀歲檔期大戰廝殺". tw.news.yahoo.com (in Chinese). Archived from the original on 2023-01-06. Retrieved 2023-01-06.

External links[edit]