To be honest, when I saw that the director of "The Sword of Qingming" was not Ang Lee and the screenwriter was a foreigner, I was a little disappointed and a little worried, but fortunately, the level of completion of the work is still remarkable, perhaps the same as the previous work. It is indeed a bit difficult to compare, but compared with most of the pure commercial works that are funny and funny in the same period, it can be called a martial arts movie that is being filmed in earnest. The film revolves around the Qingming sword that Li Mubai gave to Lord Baylor many years ago, and depicts the stories of people in the rivers and lakes either wanting to take the sword as their own, or chivalrous and abiding to contribute to the peace of the martial arts. Just like the chicken-and-egg debate, the movie lays out a question for us: whether the man controls the sword or the sword controls the man. Some people may say that the sword is dead and man is alive, and naturally man controls the sword, but it is undeniable that desire can make man blind.
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