A Woman, a Gun and a Noodle Shop poster

A Woman, a Gun and a Noodle Shop (2009)

三枪拍案惊奇

90 min ·R
ComedyDramaThriller

Wang is a gloomy, cunning and avaricious noodle shop owner in a desert town in China. His neglected, sharp-tongued wife is involved in a secret affair with Li, one of Wang’s employees. A timid man, Li reluctantly keeps the gun his lover has bought to kill her husband. But Wang is watching their every move. He bribes patrol officer Zhang to murder the illicit couple. It seems like a perfect plan: the affair will come to a cruel, bloody but satisfying end… or so he thinks. The equally wicked Zhang has an agenda of his own. As the plot twists, more blood will flow, and ever greater violence will erupt…

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Fifth Generation Chinese Cinema 1 members · 38 movies

The Fifth Generation (第五代) are the Beijing Film Academy's landmark class of 1982 — the first cohort admitted after the Cultural Revolution, trained in a system that had been shuttered for over a decade. Their films rejected the socialist-realist tradition of earlier Communist-era cinema, replacing ideological didacticism with visually lush, allegorical work rooted in Chinese history, folk memory, and landscape. Yellow Earth (Chen Kaige, 1984), shot by Zhang Yimou as cinematographer, is considered the movement's founding text. Zhang Yimou (张艺谋, born 1950) became the most internationally celebrated Chinese filmmaker of his generation: Red Sorghum won the Golden Bear at Berlin (1988); Raise the Red Lantern, Ju Dou, and To Live are among the great films of the 1990s. He later moved into wuxia spectacle (Hero, House of Flying Daggers) and directed both Beijing Olympics ceremonies (2008 and 2022). Chen Kaige (陈凯歌, born 1952) directed Farewell My Concubine (1993), the first Chinese film to win the Palme d'Or at Cannes — a sweeping epic about performance, identity, sexuality and loyalty across decades of Chinese history. Tian Zhuangzhuang (田壮壮, born 1952) represents the movement's most uncompromising pole: The Horse Thief (1986) and The Blue Kite (1993) pushed formal and political limits that neither colleague dared approach.

Crew

Zhang Yimou director
Joel Coen writer
Ethan Coen writer
Jianquan Shi writer
Jing Shang writer
Zhang Weiping producer

Cast

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