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The Little Big Soldier Full Movie In Hindi Free Download

Updated: Mar 27, 2020





















































a5c7b9f00b Two armies clash in ancient war-torn China; none survive but a young general from a royal house and a farmer foot soldier who binds the fallen leader to take him home and claim a reward. Many stand in their way: an abandoned songstress, the noble&#39;s own murderous younger brother, desperate beggars, rough slavers, and the pair&#39;s own differing agendas. Through it all, a bond forms between the two, and what will happen at journey&#39;s end becomes anyone&#39;s guess. An old soldier kidnaps a young general of an enemy state and takes him on a long journey to collect the reward. Little Big Soldier-- the only Jackie Chan movie that got me (&amp; the audience I was with) laughing AND crying-- is easily the best of the Jackie&#39;s &quot;legacy&quot; projects, where he makes a point of taking on more mature/dramatic roles and working with more industry novices/newcomers. And despite a nondescript trailer lacking in any visual/action eye-candy and lukewarm previews from critics who didn&#39;t know what to expect, audience word-of-mouth has slowly but surely carried the movie to box-office success.<br/><br/>Based on Jackie&#39;s concept for a war-time &quot;frenemy&quot; road-movie, this is the closest he has ever come to making an &quot;Indie&quot; comedy, where the communication of the story/concept always takes precedence over the presentation of visual/action set-pieces. There is no doubt that Jackie&#39;s effortless acting and antics carried the film-- but it is also sensibly supported by a story/script from the newcomer director-cum-writer Ding Sheng, who knew how to flesh out the concept (&amp; so earn his place as director) by adopting the setting of China&#39;s &quot;Warring States&quot; era.<br/><br/>As a TV commercial-turned-movie director, Ding Sheng instinctively trusted himself (&amp; the audience) to get a &quot;point/beat&quot; within a precisely-framed 3-second shot (instead of those wide, sweeping or lingering shots done-to-death by cinematographers or MTV-producers turned directors)-- making much of the &quot;foreshadowing&quot; and &quot;reveals&quot; strangely subtle for an action-comedy. So much so that some critics will inevitably lose the plot... because true to the road-movie convention, there are many &quot;pop-up&quot; cameo-roles whose appearance/plot-lines are NOT explained-- except maybe with a 3-second shot (or a one-liner)-- all of whom are inconsequential on their own, but serve to add spice as well as depth to the story/characters.<br/><br/>Not to mention that readers of sub-titles might also miss the bits of cultural references/symbolism littered throughout the film... like the irony of a royalty who quotes classical poetry from memory, but doesn&#39;t know the plant from which rice is grown-- or the fact that calling someone a &quot;little person&quot; is one of the oldest/gravest insults in Chinese culture.<br/><br/>The hodgepodge of characters and plot-points sounds like a recipe for disaster, but the &quot;low-tech&quot; animation of some opening-titles and a flurry of short opening-scenes quickly and firmly sets the tone for a light-hearted fable/satire of a dark age-- so much so that the apparently rambling dialog and wildly varying accents (including one unintelligible language) seemed quite natural to it. In fact, a result of this movie following the &quot;action-in-service-of-story/character&quot; principle was that I frequently wanted to get past the action sequences and get on the story/dialog (a prequel/sequel would be nice...)-- so here is an &quot;advanced warning&quot; with spoilers: don&#39;t watch this movie if you don&#39;t want to see Jackie Chan as...<br/><br/>*SPOILERS START SPOILERS*<br/><br/>...a brazen coward who can&#39;t fight to save his own life. The only thing Jackie Chan hurt making this movie was his finger-- and the most impressive skill Jackie Chan showed was his singing.<br/><br/>But Jackie Chan is also the only one who could have made a bumbling rogue so endearing and hold this poignant period action-comedy together-- even edging out similar fare from Stephen Chow (who is more wacky than endearing) and wanna-bes like Zhang Yimou (who is more theatrical than comical) simply in terms of &quot;laugh-tears&quot;. So much so that the whole theater burst out laughing even as his character breaks down for the only time in the movie-- because it was just such a &quot;common/banal&quot; result of war. In fact, there wasn&#39;t a single gag or joke that didn&#39;t add a little more to the story/characters-- so another thumbs-up for applying the &quot;gags-in-service-of-story/character&quot; principle.<br/><br/>And the &quot;turnabout&quot; ending of the movie is just icing on the cake-- being gently foreshadowed (it is pretty obvious that this is a &quot;message&quot; movie), it provides even more food for thought... and brings to fore the existential question faced by the Little Big Soldier: &quot;to live in peace, or die with dignity&quot;? But whether you agree with the ending/choice of the Little Big Soldier, the &quot;out-takes&quot; presented during the end-credits (a feature of most Jackie Chan movies) are there to help you &quot;deconstruct&quot; the movie with further hilarity-- and no one in my theater even tried to leave, until we were sure that the end-credits were absolutely over.<br/><br/>*SPOILERS END SPOILERS*<br/><br/>There isn&#39;t anything revolutionary in Little Big Soldier (except maybe personally for Jackie Chan as well as the novices/newcomers involved), but thanks heavens that the current generation of Chinese/HK directors is not asking audiences to condone shaky story-telling for the sake of some shiny set-pieces (like Hollywood-wannabes Zhang Yimou, John Woo, etc.). And I&#39;ll willingly pay to watch any movie that does NOT need me to switch off my brains before it can make me laugh/cry. I do not know what evil spirit pervaded the good people of IMDb but this film is everything except a comedy.<br/><br/>Little Big Soldier is the reason why i no longer watch Jackie Chan films. It is the story of a farmer drafted into an army, thrown about by events greater than him, as he struggles to help in winning the war, but fails miserably. <br/><br/>For some reason, Chan managed to show incredible depth here, so much that when i saw this film i understood that the slapstick comedy of the 90s was over and he was going to finally unite Wuxia with real acting, but again, no, that didn&#39;t happen. I guess comedy pays better. <br/><br/>I do recommend Little Big Soldier, it&#39;s *very* well made, profound, has a story we can understand, or even relate to, and is not afraid to throw punches. <br/><br/>My vote: 7.5/10 - cultural differences detract from the enjoyment of an otherwise excellent film

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