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The Jade Pendant

2017

Action / Drama / History / Western

2
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled44%
IMDb Rating5.610296

chinese immigrant

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

Christine Ko Photo
Christine Ko as May
Mark Boone Junior Photo
Mark Boone Junior as Captain Wynne
Jamie Harris Photo
Jamie Harris as Robert Thompson
Tzi Ma Photo
Tzi Ma as Yu Hing
720p.WEB
981.11 MB
1280*528
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 46 min
P/S 0 / 2

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by phd_travel8 / 10

A Western with Chinese people

I enjoyed this historical romance with a Western theme. The Chinese American immigrant experience is made into an entertaining yarn that incorporates some injustices. Liked the Chinese and Korean cast. Clara Lee is pretty. The tragic Godfrey Gao plays her love interest. Tsai Chin acts well as the madam. If only they had let it be a happy ending.

Reviewed by Foutainoflife7 / 10

Not Too Bad

A romantic drama set amidst the lynching of Chinese immigrants in 1871.

This is a B movie with a nice story. The acting is decent even if the production quality is somewhat lacking. It's better than an average B film and credit should be given where credit is due. I ended up really enjoying it. I'm glad I watched it.

Reviewed by classicsoncall7 / 10

"Sometimes there are no good choices."

Mixed feelings on this one. I thought the movie had potential starting out but it seemed to have lost it's way with a questionable continuity and loss of focus. The jade pendant that gives the movie it's title has no real impact on the story, it's simply something worn by the film's female lead (Clara Lee). Presenting Ying Ying/Peony (Lee) as a kung fu master was a surprising twist some way into the picture, but again, the writers seemed to have dropped the ball with this facet of her character. Not that this should have been a martial arts flick, but the revelation held some promise for further action beyond the marketplace scene that established her talent. Set pieces seemed to occur at random, like Sam's (Brian Yang) romantic attachment to Li Li (Nina Wu),and the white thugs dispatching Tom Wong's (Godfrey Gao) father (Russell Wong) after he had been long removed from the original story seemed forced. The most surprising aspect of the film occurred right at the finale when the story turned on a dime to mention the massacre of nineteen Chinese in Los Angeles on October 21, 1871 in one of the most horrific mass lynchings in the country's history. The movie would have been served better, if that's the point it wanted to make, to key in on events that were more global in nature relative to the Chinese community, rather than the ill fated love story between Tom and Ying Ying. Nice try I guess, but it could have been a lot better.

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