In Theaters 06.20.2025 or Watch at Home 02.27.2026

Shanghai Blues

Directed by Tsui Hark
Film Movement Classics
1984
103 Minutes
Hong Kong
Cantonese, Mandarin
Comedy, Romance, Asian, Classics
Not Rated

In 1937 after The Second Sino-Japanese War breaks out a soldier and a young woman have an awkward meet cute in darkness under a bridge as they seek refuge during a bomb raid. Although they can’t see each other’s faces they promise to meet again after the dust settles. Ten years later the soldier, now a burgeoning songwriter and tuba-player in a marching band, is back in town desperately searching for his would-be soulmate. As fate would have it they end up living in the same building unbeknownst to each other. Through a series of mishaps he mistakes her new ingénue roommate for his love interest and wacky love triangle hijinks ensue. Consummate auteur Tsui Hark almost singlehandedly reinvented Hong Kong cinema in the 80’s and 90’s with uber-kinetic genre opuses, amping up cinematic spectacle whether with special effects or sheer unbridled energy. This Hong Kong styled homage to the screwball comedies of yesteryear features black belt level slapstick and delightfully droll romcom shenanigans. With striking mise en scene and inspired production design Shanghai Blues is, “…luscious, loving and a lot of fun…one of Tsui Hark’s most enjoyable works" - Richard James Havis, South China Morning Post.

Director & Cast

  • Director: Tsui Hark
  • Starring: Kenny Bee
  • Starring: Sylvia Chang
  • Starring: Sally Yeh

Where to Watch

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Reviews

  • "It’s old school Hollywood filmmaking—comparisons to Lubitsch or Paul Fejos’s Lonesome are not unwarranted—a bittersweet look at the lunacy of a world turned upside down by decades of war and chaos. Chang’s melancholy and soulful performance is the film’s heart, the core around which Yeh and Bee’s crazier antics swirl."
    Sean Gilman, Mubi
  • "Luscious, loving and a lot of fun, the lively romantic comedy Shanghai Blues is one of Tsui Hark’s most enjoyable works."
    Richard James Havis, South China Morning Post
  • "A typically colourful, good-natured and silly romp from director-producer-legend Tsui Hark, this historical-romantic-slapstick comedy takes a time-honoured romantic storyline and spins it into a lot of daft complications. [A]s always with this tireless filmmaker, the pace never lets up and the screen is constantly awhirl with colourful movement, while the actors snap their lines out in a manner reminiscent of American pre-code cinema."
    David Cairns, Senses of Cinema
  • "[I]t succeeds in conjuring up the exuberance and energy that the very best MGM musicals could offer. "
    Andrew Saroch, Far East Films
  • "Far superior to any Hollywood attempts at this genre in the last 20 years, this delicate, touching and often hilarious little film deserves to be known to a wider audience. Fresh in its cheerful attitude and exhilarating in its execution, Shanghai Blues is a shining example of the exciting skill of its director...."
    Chris Hyde, Box Office Prophets
  • "Textually an absolutely endearing post-war comedy, Shanghai Blues’ subtextually says a lot about diaspora, inequality, and misogyny embedded into society, doing so with a thick comedic veneer which makes this film quite frankly one of Hark’s very best films."
    Rowe Reviews
  • "[A]n almost perfect blend of splendid production values, a handful of subtle visual effects and situation comedy."
    So Good Reviews

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Metrograph New York City NY June 20, 2025