House of Flying Daggers (2004) Review: A Chinese Classic
★★★★½ 4.5/5
Strongly recommended — a staple of its national cinema.
Is House of Flying Daggers worth watching?
Yes — House of Flying Daggers remains one of the most celebrated films from China, with a 65% Critic Score and enduring audience appeal. On Celluloid it holds a 65% Critic Score, 86% Audience Score, 75 Metascore, 4 on Letterboxd, and 7.5 on IMDb — numbers that explain why it still surfaces on every “best of China” list.
What is House of Flying Daggers about?
A police captain sends a blind dancer undercover to infiltrate a rebel sect, igniting a triangle of love, betrayal, and revolution. Directed by Zhang Yimou, the film stars Zhang Ziyi, Takeshi Kaneshiro, Andy Lau, and remains a reference point for Action and Romance filmmaking from China.
Should you watch House of Flying Daggers?
Yes, especially if you are exploring cinema from China — House of Flying Daggers rewards viewers who want more than algorithm-friendly new releases. At 119 minutes, it more than earns its running time — and the critics’ consensus still resonates today: Zhang Yimou’s bamboo-forest ballet of color and motion dazzles even when story logic wavers.
Where can I watch House of Flying Daggers?
Streaming availability varies by region — check major platforms in your country or local cinemas for revival screenings. House of Flying Daggers (2004) is widely indexed on IMDb (tt0385004) and remains one of the most searched classic titles from China on NewMoviesReviews.com.