Movie · 2013 · Action, Drama, History · 2h 10m · PG-13 · Chinese
Curator score: 5.6/10 (81.2K ratings)
In Martial Arts there is no right or wrong, only the last man standing.
Overview
Ip Man's peaceful life in Foshan changes after Gong Yutian seeks an heir for his family in Southern China. Ip Man then meets Gong Er who challenges him for the sake of regaining her family's honor. After the Second Sino-Japanese War, Ip Man moves to Hong Kong and struggles to provide for his family. In the mean time, Gong Er chooses the path of vengeance after her father was killed by Ma San.
Ratings
Curator score: 5.6/10
IMDb: 6.6/10
Letterboxd: 3.58/5
Metacritic: 73
TMDB: 6.6/10
Director
Wong Kar-Wai
Production
Sil-Metropole Organisation, Annapurna Pictures, Block 2 Pictures, Jet Tone Production
Cast
Tony Leung Chiu-wai, Zhang Ziyi, Chang Chen, Zhao Benshan, Xiao Shenyang, Song Hye-kyo, Wang Qingxiang, Max Zhang, Shang Tielong, Song Tao, Lo Hoi-Pang, Cung Le, King Shih-chieh, Yuen Woo-ping, Lau Kar-Yung, Lau Shun, Julian Cheung Chi-Lam, Zhou Xiaofei, Berg Ng Ting-Yip, Lo Meng
Where to watch
Amazon Prime Video, Amazon Prime Video with Ads
Curator Review
Verdict
A visually ravishing, emotionally elusive martial-arts epic that blends wuxia, romance, and historical melancholy. It can feel fragmented, but the fight choreography, atmosphere, and Wong Kar-wai’s sensibility make it a distinctive standout.
Best for
Viewers who like stylized martial-arts cinema
Fans of romantic historical dramas
People who appreciate mood-driven, elliptical storytelling
Audiences interested in Chinese history and martial-arts lineage
Skip if
You want a straightforward biopic
You prefer tightly plotted action movies
You dislike fragmented or impressionistic storytelling
You expect constant fight scenes
Overview
The Grandmaster is less a conventional Ip Man biopic than a mournful, highly stylized meditation on legacy, desire, and national upheaval. Wong Kar-wai turns martial arts into a language of restraint and longing, where every gesture feels weighted by history and every encounter carries the ache of what cannot be said aloud.
Worth noting
The action is exquisite when it arrives: precise, elegant, and often breathtaking in its use of weather, texture, and movement. But the film is just as interested in pauses, glances, and the emotional cost of honor, which means it can feel elliptical or even disjointed if you come in expecting a clean narrative drive.
Bottom line
What lingers most is the atmosphere: the snow, the rain, the smoke, the train-platform melancholy, the sense of a world changing faster than its codes can survive. It’s a martial-arts film with the soul of a tragic romance, and that combination gives it a singular pull.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Eli Hayes (4★) · 625 likes
I'll be damned if that wasn't the coolest fucking cigarette lighting scene I've ever seen. Tony Chiu Wai Leung is the man.
davidehrlich (4.5★) · 429 likes
*GRADE REFLECTS 130-MINUTE CHINESE CUT*
“Kung fu: two words – one horizontal, one vertical.”
Perfectionist, tinkerer, victim of his opaque sui generis approach to cinematic storytelling – however you slice it, when it comes to the difficulties of getting his vision onto movie screens intact, this isn’t Wong Kar-Wai’s first rodeo. The first time that the prodigiously talented Hong Kong auteur tried his hand at a film with wuxia elements, it took him nearly 14 years to arrive at a… more
Josh Lewis (4★) · 410 likes
A dream of love. Every biopic from here on out should've been required to have at least three showstopping kung-fu fights.
Sean Gilman (5★) · 341 likes
Sometimes I forget that Wong Kar-wai made a kung fu movie that's also a history of China in the 20th century that is as beautiful, weird, sexy, confounding, and expansive as any movie ever made.
davidehrlich (4.5★) · 289 likes
"All encounters in this world are a kind of reunion.”
If Wong Kar Wai’s films tend to suggest the detail and potency of a short story writer — from the sweeping “Ashes of Time” to the jewel-cut “In the Mood for Love,” most of them are either organized into discrete episodes or extrapolated from planned anthologies — Ip Man biopic “The Grandmaster” is his one true crack at an epic. Although to call this achingly sad Kung Fu saga a… more
2008 · Drama, Action, History · 1h 46m · R · Curator 7.3/10 (365.6K ratings) · Where to watch: Hulu, fuboTV, Peacock Premium, FlixFling, Hi-YAH, Peacock Premium Plus
A more direct, crowd-pleasing take on the same historical figure, with cleaner storytelling and muscular action.