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Tsui Hark’s ‘Shanghai Blues’ Returns to Theatres This Summer

Rachel Ho by Rachel Ho
June 26, 2025
in News
0
Photo still from Tsui Hark's Shanghai Blues

Photo Courtesy of Film Movement Classics

Through Film Movement Classics, legendary Hong Kong director Tsui Hark‘s Shanghai Blues returns to North American theatres this summer with a shiny new 4K restoration look.

A seminal classic of Tsui’s filmography, Shanghai Blues is set 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.

The 4K restoration of Shanghai Blues was supervised from the original negative by Tsui Hark with L’Immagine Ritrovata and the soundtrack remixed by One Cool Sound.

Shanghai Blues will be playing at the following theatres and cities this summer:

MetrographNew York City, NYJune 20, 2025
American CinemathequeLos Angeles, CAJune 27, 2025
Cinema ModerneMontreal, QCJune 27, 2025
The Tara TheaterAtlanta, GAJune 27, 2025
The Beacon CinemaSeattle, WAJune 29, 2025
Laemmle Claremont 5Claremont, CAJuly 2, 2025
Laemmle GlendaleGlendale, CAJuly 2, 2025
Laemmle Monica 4Santa Monica, CAJuly 2, 2025
Laemmle NewhallSanta Clarita, CAJuly 2, 2025
Laemmle’s Town Center 5Encino, CAJuly 2, 2025
Cleveland CinemathequeCleveland, OHJuly 5, 2025
Webster Film SeriesSt. Louis, MOJuly 11, 2025
The CinemathequeVancouver, BCJuly 12, 2025

Tags: Hong KongShanghai BluesTsui Hark
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Rachel Ho

Rachel Ho

Rachel Ho is a freelance film critic, writer and edtor. Currently, she is the film editor at Exclaim! Magazine and has contributed to a variety of publications such as, The Globe and Mail, CBC Arts, POV Magazine, Slash Film, eliteGen Magazine and others. In 2021, Rachel received the Toronto Film Critic's Emerging Critic Award and has been a voter for the Golden Globe Awards since 2022.

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