The Last Emperor Reviews and Ratings



  • November 20, 2009
    Really good bio of the last emperor of China.
  • November 16, 2009
    Best Cinematography 1987 - Best Costume Design 1987
  • November 12, 2009
    A great biopic, a must see.
  • November 9, 2009
    Stunning. Just beautiful, careful and delicate.
  • November 4, 2009
    una autentica belleza
  • October 16, 2009
    drags, very beautifully shot, but way too long.
  • September 22, 2009
    Bertolucci's tries another perspective and succeeds wonderfully. Not his best, but definitely not his worst either. Director's cut: Way to go with another giant epic masterpiece.

    93/100
  • September 9, 2009
    So glorious.. visually stunning and the story is extreme. So long yet never boring.
  • August 13, 2009
    ONE OF THE BEST FILMS OF ALL TIME
  • August 13, 2009
    I swa, but I don't remeber if I like it...
  • August 11, 2009
    Need to see the other movies nominated that year, cuz this was pretty boring.
  • August 4, 2009
    Excellent historic epic from Bertolucci. The transformation of China from 1900 to 1950 seems virtually unbelievable. The shot of the young emperor running out the palace is perfection.
  • July 27, 2009
    Extremely polished historical epic.
  • July 26, 2009
    Brilliant film by Bertolucci that sucks you right in from the beginning. I had no interest in this but went anyway on a date and was immediately enthralled in it. All performances are hypnotic and it's refreshing to see Peter O'Toole play a true Scottish gentleman instead of the ...( read more)rogues and hoods he likes to play. Visually stunning in the extreme!
  • July 6, 2009
    First, let me recommend the Director's Cut though it is 3 hours and 20 minutes. There is so much historical and political content that I found a second viewing helpful too. The costumes, sets, cinematography, and music are all sumptuous.

    The movie covers almost 60 years of C...( read more)hinese history from the perspective of one person. The last emperor, Pu Yi, lived through so much history during the first half of the 20th century. I don't know how much of the story is completely historically accurate, but the changes of the decades and major historical events seem to be presented authentically. The story reminded me at certain points of the movie and book, The Good Earth. While that story shows some of the cultural changes in Chinese history from the perspective of peasants out in the fields, this story is told mainly from within the walls of the Forbidden City or the walls of a Communist re-education camp. There is a strong imprisonment theme! The story is told in flashbacks, and I thought this device was well crafted with interesting parallels.

    Pu Yi's life is incredibly tragic and yet I found all the drama enthralling. He becomes Emperor at 3 years old and so hasn't formed any ideas for himself. Even later in his life you can't really say that he ever gained much experience as a leader. Earlier in China's history this might have worked out better to have a leader start so young without much conflict, but with all the changes preparing to take place in the 20th century it is inevitable that Pu Yi would become a tragic figure. He becomes spoiled because every want and need is taken care of for him. He's a puppet controlled by many others through his life. Early in his life China becomes a Republic and he no longer has any real power, but traditions stay the same inside the Forbidden City. Just before WWI O'Toole arrives as a Western tutor and Pu Yi begins to learn about the modern world. Eventually he tries to reform the traditions of imperial China, but he still takes a wife and a consort (a second wife). China then becomes a Communist country and some people turn against the Manchurian part of northern China. Since Manchurian is the Emperor's heritage, he and his remaining staff are kicked out of the Forbidden City. He ends up being welcomed by Japan in the early 30's before WWII and they feed him some misinformation. At this point he still craves the power of being Emperor and there is a lot of political intrigue as Manchuria becomes independent (but, Japan is really pulling the strings). He has relationship issues with his wife and consort, one feeling like a third wheel in the more westernized Japan and the other becoming addicted to opium. After WWII the Communist powers in China change a bit and in 1950 we catch up to the "current" events where Pu Yi and all the other imperial supporters are being re-educated. Ying gives an impressive performance and human face to the "Governor" of the camp. It is an amazing, in depth, dramatic conflict from the American audience perspective when you realize that Pu Yi was working with the Japanese, one of the Axis powers of WWII, and the Communists are trying to turn him into a comrade. Between a rock and a hard place. There's a good portion of Americans that wouldn't see either side of this conflict as worth cheering for. But still I found it very engaging to watch John Lone portray the struggle.

    One of my favorite quotes: The Governor- "You are responsible for what you do! All your life you thought you were better than everyone else. Now you think you're the worst of all!" There's also a quote about how all the new generals and changes in the communist regime are just like the battling war lords of tribal society. There's a sense that the differences between the old and young in society will lead to history repeating itself, and in fact power keeps on shifting but nothing in history really changes.
  • July 3, 2009
    To long since I saw It
  • June 28, 2009
    i'd like to see this one again :)
  • June 20, 2009
    Majestuosa. Cuando cine y arte son una misma palabra.
  • June 17, 2009
    Documentary, history and monumental epic rolled into one.

    The film takes us into the life of Pu YI, the last emperor of the Qing Dynasty. As a three-year-old he ascends the throne as "Emperor for 10,000," eventhough his empire is unstable and crumbling beyond the palace walls....( read more)

    Oscar-winning director Bernardo Bertolucci's film was produced at great expense, as he employed a huge cast of extras, and was made entirely on location in China.

    It's an exotic and fascinating film that would overwhelms Westeners: eunuchs populate the palace, concubines offer themselves, food tasters control the emperor's nutrition, and doctors study his stool. Individual characters are carefully hidden behind faces covered in stereotypical make up. Pu Yi also remains a stranger, even when he dances the Charleston or climbs into bed with two women at the same time.

    Taking him to Manchukuo, where Japanese set up a puppet regime in an effort to oppose communism, Pu Yi becomes a toy in the hand of the new powers, and, ultimately, their victim. He ends up in a Communist re-education camp for ten years, from which he gains an early release, and returns to Beijing as a gardener.

    The film is a story without a happy ending. Exploring the evolution of a human subject by depicting the transformation from "a dragon to a butterfly" syndrome, Bertolucci has explored a more intimate world of personal relationships affected by the conflicting worlds of different cultures.

    At the end of his life, Pu Yi reduced to a broken man in Mao uniform. Although tragic, one cannot help but feel that somehow he is responsible for his own fate.
  • June 6, 2009
    Muy bonita....y muy inspiradora
  • April 23, 2009
    Very long movie, but excellent.
  • April 18, 2009
    a moving, epic film....
  • April 4, 2009
    This Best Picture winner was interesting and memorable. Beautiful cinematography, costumes and detail. Normally I really like historical accounts...but this one was just pretty good...just not my cup of tea.
  • April 1, 2009
    Nudnawy, o ile dobrze pamietam...
  • March 29, 2009
    want to see sometime in my life.
  • March 27, 2009
    ? This movie won best picture. I mean it was a good movie but it was kinda boring and some parts made no sense. I guess ima have to watch it a second time to see if im mising anything amazing.
  • March 26, 2009
    Good film. Many lessons we can learn from this film, especially the history of political power.
  • March 24, 2009
    this looks like a good movie
  • March 14, 2009
    Well worth every moment.
  • March 10, 2009
    With rich visuals, a powerful story and strong performances, this is a wonderful, touching epic.
  • February 24, 2009
    The loss of an emperor
  • February 22, 2009
    Very touched and the great sinematography I ever seen
  • February 20, 2009
    very good biography movie
  • February 19, 2009
    meio entediante. Filme enorme.
  • February 18, 2009
    It has been 2 days since I saw this film for the first time and even at this moment I still can't stop thinking about it. This is the first big budget western film to take us into the real Forbidden City. A lot of hard work went into making this film and my respects goes to Berna...( read more)ndo Bertolucci for having the courage to take on such an immense story. The film is magnificent and intriguing throughout. This has to be one of the best looking films ever made. The sets, the costumes, the cinematography, create many scenes that just look and feel perfect. Its a great character study and a great history lesson.
  • February 6, 2009
    A masterful creation of its own.
  • February 4, 2009
    Unprecedented, sumptuous epic, a visual marvel of lavish sets and costumes. Vittorio Storaro's exquisite cinematography subtly underscores Pu Yi's rise and fall, shifting from rich reds, oranges, and yellows to somber blues and grays.
  • January 14, 2009
    The scope of Bertolucci's enormous epic is, in itself, something to be admired. The photography is stunning. Storaro's color scheme and majestic camera movement bring texture and visual power to the film. Spanning over several decades, The Last Emperor never loses the viewer beca...( read more)use its common thread is the examination of a person's painfully unorthodox life. This technical gem is also an emotionally effective and very tragic story. Breathtaking.
  • December 10, 2008
    ''All your life you thought you were better than everyone else. Now you think you're the worst of all!''

    He was the Lord of Ten Thousand Years, the absolute monarch of China. He was born to rule a world of ancient tradition. Nothing prepared him for our world of change.

    ...( read more) The story of the final Emperor of China.

    John Lone: Emperor Pu Yi / Henry

    One could state Bernardo Bertolucci creation of a masterpiece on an era of history that would definitely change the relationship of nations throughout the era forever, is putting it mildly to say the least. That he did it with such artistic factual film-making is to say his success was close to the divine.
    You may conclude that would be a quite accurate statement about The Last Emperor, especially for American film-making, they had nothing to do with it.
    To amass such a huge cast today would put many nations into immediate expenditures and losses, much less movie-producers. Every scene is detailed to utter faultless finesse, the reign of the last emperor of China wasn't that long ago, so there were unlimited sources up for grabs. That they were made available and especially shooting on location in The Forbidden City with the approval of the communist government of Peking in the 1980s is even more fantastical. After centuries of the Qing emperors' rulings, for this gigantic nation to change its manner of governing is mind blowing. One would assume China would just as soon deny that year of its history, mirroring Japan denying a fair few if not all, Asian atrocities.

    ''The Emperor has been a prisoner in his own palace since the day that he was crowned, and has remained a prisoner since he abdicated. But now he's growing up, he may wonder why he's the only person in China who may not walk out of his own front door. I think the Emperor is the loneliest boy on Earth.''

    The Last Emperor is an epic that delves into the seas of Time and the ensuing effects it has on a being and his culture as time transitions through his lifetime. The Last Emperor of the Qing dynasty, Pu-Yi, was appointed in 1909 at the age of three and due to his youth ended up being a puppet to his administration. Bertolucci successfully shows us a young man who while understandably spoilt by many luxuries of monarchy, is in truth, a tender hearted, independent thinker, who is passionate about his homeland(Manchuria) and has a ravenous desire for experiencing life in the outside world.
    His caged lifestyle in the Forbidden City (Beijing) is definitely a major contributor. From his infancy the director takes us through a chain of historical events that ultimately lead to Pu-Yi being an ordinary man (we know this from the beginning, however flashbacks explain his situation at the start). However, it is not the desired lifestyle that he sought as an Emperor in childhood.

    Last Emperor is breathtaking in its cinematography and Bertolucci's direction flawless like a newly cut diamond. Upon research, a lot of criticism was directed at his film 1900 (1976) due to its sheer length. The Last Emperor runs in at 215 minutes(DIRECTORS CUT) and barring 10 minutes of a marriage related scene, it never relinquishes. Bertolucci seamlessly interweaves the flashbacks with Pu-Yi's situation in post-WWII China by providing us with a real life tragedy that epitomizes human weaknesses, vices, love and loyalty. Here is a film that is a true story but goes beyond mere narration or simple depiction, it is a three and a half hour, non-stop attention grasping journey through the spectrum of humanity that defines our lifetime through the eyes of an unfortunate soul who was a victim of circumstances like many are. Any questions that the viewer will have concerning an event in the plot will be immediately answered through the rich tapestry that Bertolucci shows when depicting Pu-Yi's imperial life.

    Reginald Fleming 'R.J.' Johnston: Words are important.
    Pu Yi, at 15: Why are words important?
    Reginald Fleming 'R.J.' Johnston: If you cannot say what you mean, your majesty, you will never mean what you say and a gentleman should always mean what he says.

    On a technical note, the acting in this film is brilliant. John Lone deserved at least an Oscar nomination for best actor due to his seamless portrayal of Pu-Yi. He makes his portrayal of a 21 - 60 year old Pu-Yi seem like an effortless feat. Through his performance the audience feels an even greater compassion for the last emperor as we come across a man who despite all the hardships he endured was very compassionate and soft centered underneath layers of enigmatic stillness. The sheer down to earth nature of his character as a 55-60 year old who walks with a tired smile, forever accompanied by his loving brother, is a testament to Lone's ability to portray any age and move the audience.
    Once again, it takes a Hailey's comet like event for the Academy to nominate someone from the eastern world (or non-British, non-American when it comes to best actor). The rest of the cast is also brilliant barring Ryuichi Sakamoto (who portrays the one-armed Masahiko Amakasu) who, for the most part, presents us with a classic display of Japanese overacting. Although I wouldn't call it overacting in a Kurasawa-esque/Japanese film environment, it becomes quite hilarious in a production such as this.

    The film won a number of Oscars, including the awards for Best Picture and Best Director.
    What surprised me was that it did not receive a single Oscar nomination in the acting categories, although in my view it could have had three or four, Best Actor for John Lone as Pu Yi himself, Best Actress for Joan Chen as his tragic, drug-addicted Empress Wan Jung, and Best Supporting Actor for Peter O'Toole as Pu Yi's Scottish tutor Reginald Johnstone (and possibly also for Ying Ruocheng as the prison governor). Around the time this film was released, the lovely Joan Chen was widely tipped to become a major Hollywood star; that she has never really done so might suggest that leading roles for Oriental actresses are as hard to come by as they were in the days of Anna May Wong.

    So ultimately what does Pu Yi contribute to his life? His is littered with the bodies of those that have come into contact with him, a morbid graveyard created from deaths that did not come from his hands, but from his ego and his power.
    My inability to either love or hate him if anything makes him quite human. If he had been blatantly set up as an obvious protagonist or antagonist, the movie would have been flat, shallow. Humans are hard things to find in movies these days, and here is a rare opportunity to catch a sight of one. Hats off to Bertolucci for such an intelligent film and a journey of a lifetime.

    ''Open the door! Open the door! Open the door!... Open the door!''
  • November 29, 2008
    Our teacher told me about the plot.. and it seems to be a good movie.
  • November 22, 2008
    Beautifully photographed movie....touching story
  • November 15, 2008
    A story about the last Emporor of China, this film is moving, like any other movie from Bertolugcci. But this movie shows a world of forbidden caracther and much uniqeness about the forbidden world of the secret last emperor.
  • November 2, 2008
    They were permitted to film in the forbidden city-a place that to this day is still mostly closed off to the public-it is stunning!
  • November 1, 2008
    trist
  • October 6, 2008
    A very long, interesting, and intense story. Definitely one of the better movies to come out in recent years. Peter O' Toole is awesome and the story just flows so well, it keeps you engaged to the very end.

Summary


The Last Emperor Summary