Actually, Wwen, its fire, not blood =P
I got exposed to the story by the Koei video game series Romance of the Three Kingdoms and Dynasty Warriors. In the games it was the Battle of the Red Wall, because of the wall of flames used in the movie's climactic scene. In the movie, it's the Battle of the Red Cliff because that's the name of the place.../shrug. The video games also emphasized Liu Bei as the main hero, while the movie seemed to be split between Sun Quan's main general and Liu Bei's advisor as the leading men.
The version I saw was dubbed in English. Unfortunately, this resulted in virtually every one of the actors having William Shatner Syndrome ("We should use better............tactics!"), which was a bit grating. In this case, I think I might have enjoyed the original Chinese dialogue with subtitles better.
The movie also seemed to have a very different pacing to it. I can't seem to put my finger on it directly, but the pacing definitely seemed "foreign" to me, and in this case foreign=slow. Given the size of the source story, this is understandable. But, as Lydiaa said, if you don't have much familiarity with the story in the first place, you might get a little antsy in some places, especially if you like the pacing of movies like the re-imagined "Star Trek".
Visually, the movie is a treat in places, but drab in others. The battle formations shown give you a great understanding of how BIG they are...but at the same time, it seems like all the soldiers are dressed in the same drab and dull colors, making you wonder how the hell these guys knew who to try to stick the pointy ends of their swords into sometimes.
I'm glad to have seen it...but it's not a movie I'll be doing a lot of repeat viewings of.
_________________ Women are from Hoboken, men are from Trenton. ~ Jimmy Kimmel
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