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The Last Emperor

The Last Emperor

  • Status: Released
  • 04-10-1987
  • Runtime: 163 min
  • Score: 7.6
  • Vote count: 1756

A dramatic history of Pu Yi, the last of the Emperors of China, from his lofty birth and brief reign in the Forbidden City, the object of worship by half a billion people; through his abdication, his decline and dissolute lifestyle; his exploitation by the invading Japanese, and finally to his obscure existence as just another peasant worker in the People's Republic.

John Lone

Pu Yi (Adult)

Joan Chen

Wan Jung

Peter O'Toole

Reginald Johnston (R.J.)

Ruocheng Ying

The Governor

Victor Wong

Chen Pao Shen

Dennis Dun

Big Li

Ryuichi Sakamoto

Amakasu

Maggie Han

Eastern Jewel

Ric Young

Interrogator

Vivian Wu

Wen Hsiu

Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa

Chang

Jade Go

Ar Mo

Fumihiko Ikeda

Yoshioka

Richard Vuu

Pu Yi (3 years)

Tsou Tijger

Pu Yi (8 years)

Tao Wu

Pu Yi (15 years)

Guang Fan

Pu Chieh (Adult)

Henry Kyi

Pu Chieh (7 years)

Alvin Riley III

Pu Chieh (14 years)

Lisa Lu

Tzu Hsui

Hideo Takamatsu

General Ishikari

Hajime Tachibana

Japanese Translator

Basil Pao

Prince Chun

Henry O

Lord Chamberlain

Chen Kaige

Captain of Imperial Guard

Liangbin Zhang

Big Foot

Wenjie Huang

Hunchback

Dong Liang

Lady Aisin-Gioro

Zhendong Dong

Old Doctor

Jiechen Dong

Doctor

Constantine Gregory

Oculist

Huaikuei Soong

Lung Yu

Ruzhen Shao

First High Consort

Yu Li

Second High Consort

Guangli Li

Third High Consort

Chunqing Xu

Grey Eyes

Zhang Tianmin

Old Tutor

Hongnian Luo

Sleeping Old Tutor

Shihong Yu

Hsiao Hsiu

Jun Wu

Wen Hsiu (12 years)

Lucia Hwong

Lady of the Book

Jingping Cui

Lady of the Pen

Shi Liang

Republican Officer

Junguo Gu

Tang

Xu Tongrui

Captain of Feng's Army

Fusheng Li

Minister of Trade

Chen Shu

Chang Chinghui

Shuyan Cheng

Lady Hiro Saga

Daxing Zhang

Tough Warder

Ruigang Zu

Second Warder

Yuan Jin

Party Boss

Akira Ikuta

Japanese Doctor

Michael Vermaaten

American

Matthew Spender

Englishman

Cai Hongxiang

Scarface (uncredited)

Glen Murphy

Captain (uncredited)

Biao Wang

Prisoner (uncredited)

CinemaSerf

This is a glorious film to watch on a big screen. It depicts the end of empire and the birth of new ones - and it does it in a spectacularly colourful and stylish fashion. The death of the Empress Dowager sees the toddler Pu Yi ascend the Dragon Throne of China, and live amidst concubines and eunuchs in the Forbidden City. He grows up believing his is a divine right to rule, and it is only upon the arrival of his tutor RJ (Peter O'Toole) and his procurement of spectacles that his eyes begin to be opened to the reality that his kingdom is entirely enclosed within a wall of golden yellow tiles. When this idyll is disrupted by warring events outside, the Emperor (now John Lone) sone finds himself a playboy, married to an opium addict (Joan Chen) and a useful puppet of the manipulative Japanese who have invaded much of his erstwhile realm. WWII arrives, power struggles ensue and the story of his eventual - and rather brutal - reintegration into the newly established Chinese communist society is depicted sensitively and without recourse to too much melodrama or sentiment. The score adds a wonderful richness to what is undoubtedly the star of this - the cinematography. Set inside the splendour of the actual Imperial Palace complex in Peking, we get a wonderful sense of the grandeur, isolation and luxury of life inside this sumptuously decorated collection of marble and brightly painted villas whilst outside, poverty and mysticism reigned more surely than did the occupant of the throne. The costume design is also remarkable - a perfect eye for the detail of the period from the start to the middle of the 20th Century. To be honest, the acting - aside from an engaging performance from the inquisitive and mischievous three year old (Richard Vuu) is all pretty routine. O'Toole features sparingly and doesn't quite fit the bill as the learned and worldly scholar. Lone and Chen are competent but they really only shine a light on the rather stilted dialogue. This isn't really a film about words - it's a film about visuals. It's about history, politics, corruption, betrayal - and even a little bit of love - all encased in a shell of creative elegance. It's wasted on the television - but is certainly one of the best examples of "epic" cinema yet made and Bertolucci has clearly invested a great deal of himself in this beautiful piece of drama. A must see, I'd say.