Painted Skin: The Resurrection Explained

Painted Skin: The Resurrection
Native Name:
Child:yes
T:畫皮II
S:画皮II
P:Huà Pí Èr
Director:Wuershan
Producer:Chen Kuo-fu
Pang Hong
Wang Zhonglei
Screenplay:Ran Ping
Ran Jianan
Starring:Zhou Xun
Chen Kun
Zhao Wei
Feng Shaofeng
Yang Mi
Fei Xiang
Chen Tingjia
Music:Katsunori Ishida
Cinematography:Arthur Wong
Editing:Xiao Yang
Studio:Ningxia Film Studio
Dinglongda (Beijing) International Culture Media Co., Ltd.
Huayi Brothers
Kylin Films
Distributor:Huayi Brothers
Runtime:120 minutes
Country:China
Language:Mandarin
Budget:¥150 million[1] [2]
Gross:¥726 million[3]

Painted Skin: The Resurrection is a 2012 Chinese fantasy action film directed by Wuershan, starring Zhou Xun, Chen Kun, Zhao Wei, Feng Shaofeng and Yang Mi. The film reunites most of the original cast of the 2008 film Painted Skin., acting as a sequel to the original film in a new storyline and characters with some degrees of connection.

A television adaptation of the second film, Painted Skin: The Resurrection, similar to the first, was broadcast in 2013.

Plot

In the 500 years that have passed since the events of the previous film, the fox demon Xiaowei has been imprisoned in ice for violating the demon code. Que'er, a quirky bird demon, rescues Xiaowei, and the two leave in search of a man who is willing to give his heart to Xiaowei so that she may become human. They first encounter a boorish prince who scoffs at the suggestion, so they take his heart. Xiaowei uses her magical powers to bait another potential donor, a general who dons a gold mask that covers half of his face. Curious about the general's identity, Xiaowei incapacitates him, but discovers later that her rescuer is not a man, but a woman with half of her face disfigured.

Xiaowei accompanies the mysterious woman to the White City at the border, where the woman is revealed to be Princess Jing, the youngest daughter of the ruling family who is inspecting the military outpost led by General Huo Xin. Huo once served as Jing's lead bodyguard and they developed a deep mutual affection. However, Huo remained faithful to his profession and spurned the princess' confessions to him. Princess Jing's face was disfigured by a monstrous bear while she was out in the forest. Huo showed up too late but still managed to kill the bear and save her.

That evening, while performing for Jing, Huo and his men, Xiaowei malevolently enchants the general. Unaware of Xiaowei's bewitchment and feeling betrayed by Huo, Jing throws herself into a lake, but Xiaowei rescues her. Revealing her magical powers to Jing, Xiaowei suggests that the princess's disfigurement will prevent Huo from ever loving her and convinces Jing that they should switch appearances to test Huo.

Meanwhile, Que'er, while walking through the White City at night, is accosted by two hooligans. Pang Lang, a town dweller who claims to have descended from a family of demon hunters, intervenes, but not before Que'er rips out the heart of one of her tormentors, revealing herself as a demon. Pang Lang tries to warn Huo about the demons but is prevented from entering Huo's residence by his guards.

That night, Jing, in disguise as Xiaowei, seduces the enchanted Huo. The next day, exploiting Jing's desire for Huo's seemingly unrequited love, Xiaowei suggests she and Jing exchange appearances permanently. Huo enters and, in a final attempt to reclaim his affection, Jing exposes Xiaowei as a demon and orders Huo to kill her. The enchantment prevents Huo from following the order, so Jing attacks him in frustration.

Suddenly, the army of the neighbouring Tianlang kingdom, led by an evil witch doctor, arrives at the White City to seize Princess Jing, who has been betrothed to the Tianlang prince. Jing refuses to accept the marriage, forcing Huo to protect the city. Jing ends the fighting by threatening to take her own life, and the Tianlang forces agree to retreat if Jing gives herself up in three days. Unwilling to marry a man other than Huo, Jing offers up her heart to Xiaowei so that the two may switch bodies and thus their destinies.

Xiaowei, in disguise as Jing, arrives at the Tianlang camp and discovers that her fiancé is the boorish prince whose heart she earlier consumed and that the Tianlang plan to reinvigorate him with her heart, which is actually Jing's. Without her demon magic, Xiaowei realises she can not stop this plan.

Que'er reveals to Pang Lang that Xiaowei and Jing have switched identities, and the demon hunter disseminates the information to Huo. Just as Jing is about to consume her first heart, completing her transition into a demon, Huo intervenes. He blinds himself with his sword, demonstrating his commitment to Jing and breaking the power of Xiaowei's enchantment. Que'er, Jing and Huo then rush to the Tianlang camp to reclaim Jing's heart. The four defeat the Tianlang forces, but Que'er is killed in the battle. Huo offers his own heart to Xiaowei in exchange for Jing's, but Xiaowei decides to return Jing's heart unconditionally. Under the bewitching moment of a parting eclipse, Xiaowei's soul merges with Jing's body and Jing's face is healed in the process. The film concludes with Huo and Jing preparing to live happily ever after, while Pang Lang finds a bird resembling Que'er in her true form and obtains a feather similar to the one he got from her when they first met.

Cast

Reception

Box office

In mainland China, Painted Skin: The Resurrection scored the highest grossing opening for a local film and the third highest opening following the 3-D re-release of Titanic (1997) and .[4] With total box office gross of $115.07 million,[5] the film became the highest grossing domestic film in China beating the previous record holder Let the Bullets Fly.[6]

Critical reception

Aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes reported that 83% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 6 reviews, with an average rating of 4.40/10.[7] After Painted Skin: The Resurrection premiered in China, critics praised the two leading actresses, especially Zhao Wei's performance.[8] Audience members named Zhao "the most beautiful scarred woman ever seen".[9]

Derek Elley from Film Business Asia wrote:

"The result is a very entertaining, slightly over-long costume fantasy whose performances and sheer technique carry a script that often punches above its weight."..." Zhou, who since Suzhou River (1999) has almost had the Mainland patent on sexually ambiguous, seductive roles, dominates the movie, as a demon who wants to be human even if it means pain. But she gets a run for her money from Zhao, who's developing much more screen gravitas in her mid-30s and is better directed here than in her previous female-warrior role in Jingle Ma's Mulan (2009). Zhao's scenes with Zhou are much more emotionally resonant than those with the weak-eyed Chen, her putative romantic partner."

Deborah Young from The Hollywood Reporter wrote:

"The result is a roller-coaster of a film that will divide audiences particularly along gender lines, having greater appeal for female viewers both because it is fundamentally a love story with a noble, long-haired, romantic hero, and thanks to the presence of four strong and powerful women characters who run the show. Performances run surprisingly deep, and the bond that links Jing and Xiaowei, in particular, rings very true in spite of the square-off between divas Zhou Xun and Zhao Wei."[10]

Awards and nominations

Awards & Nominations
EventCategoryNomineeResult
49th Golden Horse AwardsBest Visual EffectXu An, Chang Hongsong
9th Guangzhou Student Film FestivalFavorite ActressZhao Wei
Favorite RolePrincess Jing (Zhao Wei)
4th Chinese Director's Association AwardsBest ActressZhou Xun
6th Vietnam DAN Movie AwardsFavorite Chinese ActressZhao Wei
Best Film from Mainland and Taiwan

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Box office/ business for Painted Skin: The Resurrection (2012). 2012. 2012-09-02.
  2. Painted Skin: The Resurrection. Film Business Asia. 2012. 2012-09-02.
  3. Chinese comedy 'Lost in Thailand' breaks records. Thomas. Schmid. Film Journal International. Painted Skin 2, which had earned a total of 726 million yuan ($117 million) at the box office..
  4. Web site: Painted Skin puts China back on top. Film Business Asia. Cremin, Stephen. July 4, 2012. July 4, 2012.
  5. Web site: Mainland Box Office Chart for Week 31, 2012 . 2012-09-02. EntGroup Consulting.
  6. Web site: Resurrection takes China BO record. Film Business Asia. July 24, 2012. Cremin, Stephen. July 24, 2012. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120730010234/http://www.filmbiz.asia/news/resurrection-takes-china-bo-record. July 30, 2012.
  7. Web site: Painted Skin: The Resurrection . . August 28, 2021.
  8. http://ent.cntv.cn/20120618/100015.shtml 《画皮2》双旦争艳
  9. http://ent.hebnews.cn/2012-06/28/content_2745914.htm#445299-tsina-1-90848-0dd43ad67e43689f28c9cdd112713059 《画皮2》上映 赵薇被封“最美疤痕女”
  10. http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/review/painted-skin-2-resurrection-shanghai-film-festival-gordon-chan-kris-phillips-338550 Painted Skin 2: The Resurrection: Film Review