The Promise (2006) Critic Reviews

Metascore®:

56 =
Based upon 12 Critic Reviews
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The Onion (A.V. Club) | Tasha RobinsonAdd Critic to Favorites

For Kaige, The Promise can't exactly be called a return to form--it's more a return to "Hero" and "House Of Flying Daggers" director Zhang Yimou's form. Either way, it's still glorious.Read the full review

Los Angeles Times | Kevin ThomasAdd Critic to Favorites

Chen's masterful, deeply perceptive direction of his superb cast is equaled by the film's luminous cinematography, rich yet spare and stylized production and costume design, and rousing score.Read the full review

The New York Times | Dana StevensAdd Critic to Favorites

The Promise occupies a curious landscape somewhere between opera and cartoon.Read the full review

The Hollywood Reporter | Kirk HoneycuttAdd Critic to Favorites

While it aspires to draw the same audiences who admired "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" and "Hero," The Promise is but a pale imitation of those landmark films.Read the full review

Variety | Robert KoehlerAdd Critic to Favorites

A mixed bag of near-risible storylines, second-rate CG effects, some fabulous set pieces, somewhat cartoonish martial arts fighting and difficult international casting.Read the full review

Boston Globe | Ty BurrAdd Critic to Favorites

Has a daft sweep, and if you're in the mood for empty swordplay in baroque settings, purple dialogue delivered with straight faces, and romantic yearnings that never, ever resolve, The Promise may be your cup of oolong.Read the full review

Wall Street Journal | Joe MorgensternAdd Critic to Favorites

So absurdly overproduced that there's even a surfeit of cherry blossoms. By the end they look like litter.Read the full review

ReelViews | James BerardinelliAdd Critic to Favorites

The over-the-top acting is forgivable, but the plot's incoherence is not.Read the full review

Entertainment Weekly | Staff (Not credited)Add Critic to Favorites

There's a nice Road Runner-cartoon moment when the slave runs really, really fast, carrying the wounded general on his back while dodging an attack of CG bulls. I can't imagine Road Runner was what Chen had in mind for the most expensive movie ever made in China, but then, I was born too late for the time of the snowy eagle.Read the full review

Washington Post | Stephen HunterAdd Critic to Favorites

The movie is full of invasions, assassination attempts, chases and escapes in seemingly random order, the result being completely chaotic.Read the full review

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