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This film is a historical drama set in the imperial court in the closing years of the Qing dynasty (late 19th and early 20th century). The Empress Dowager Cixi wielded effective power during much of this period, having staged a coup in 1861 that made her regent over the infant Emperor X and then, after his death, the young Emperor Guangxu. Cixi ...
Pages in category "Films set in 19th-century Qing dynasty" The following 29 pages are in this category, out of 29 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Films set in 19th-century Qing dynasty (29 P) ... (1978 film) Foreign Devils (1927 film) H. Hail the Judge; Hero – Beyond the Boundary of Time; The Heroes (1980 ...
Set during the 19th century, fictionalized account of the reign of Empress Myeongseong: Chi-hwa-seon: 2002: 1843–97: About the life of Korean painter Oh-won. The Sound of a Flower: 2015: 1867–84: About the life of the Korean pansori singer Shin Jae-hyo. The Good, the Bad, the Weird: 2008: 1920–1930: Loosely based on the seizure of 150,000 ...
At a lavish banquet, the Manchurian Empress Dowager Cixi of the 19th century Qing empire orders security chief of the Forbidden City Liu Jing Tian to capture the five thieves that stole 2 million taels from the Royal Treasury. Lord Liu, in turn, asks chief court constable Leng Tian-Ying, nicknamed Killer Constable, to assemble a small group of ...
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1960 film) The Adventures of Mark Twain (1944 film) The Adventures of Pinocchio (1996 film) The Adventures of Robert Macaire; The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1938 film) Aferim! The Age of Innocence (1924 film) Agnosia (film) Agony (1981 film) Agustina of Aragon (1929 film) Agustina of Aragon (1950 film ...
The film was a box office hit and is largely credited with starting the period martial arts craze of the early to mid 1990s. It ran for almost two months, the longest duration for any of the series, and grossed HK$29,672,278 in Hong Kong. [3] In the Philippines, the film was released as Enter the New Game of Death by First Films on 15 October ...
By the end of the 19th century, the novel was republished at least 13 times. [ 14 ] In A Brief History of Chinese Fiction , Lu Xun called the novel "outstanding" among "storytelling tales" [ 21 ] and wrote: "Though some of the incidents are rather naive, the gallant outlaws are vividly presented and the descriptions of town life and jests with ...