By the Will of Chingis Khan

2009
By the Will of Chingis Khan
4.6| 2h7m| en| More Info
Released: 04 November 2009 Released
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Synopsis

Three childhood friends. Three sworn brothers. One was initiated into the sacrament and grew up to be a great shaman. The other two followed the path of war and the nation recognised them as leaders. But only one of them was to become the ruler of the entire steppe. He was chosen by the Eternal Blue Sky and the Sky itself put him on a trial. Love for a woman will make him a warrior. Allegiance to the law will lead him to fratricide. Striving for peace will force him to start war. The council of nine tribes, speaking nine tongues, proclaimed him the sovereign and gave him the name of an ancient deity - Genghis Kahn.

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MVictorPjinsiste The sleeve poster is good, It's what compelled me to rent the title - overall a bad decision.This movie looks like it was edited by people who had no idea what a movie is, or saw none: It is a serie of rather short chronological scenes, seemingly insignificant, on a background of more or less relevant muzak, abruptely stitched together with a total lack of context or comment. That could be as useful tool of education on How to Not make a Movie. I felt no desire whatsoever to follow the characters in their petty womenlike sqabbles. It took a few times to try and finished viewing the actual movie because I was so bored and failed.Otherwise, the images are magnificent, the actors are no without talent, and it carries an air of low-level authenticity in the way it depicts Mongolian everyday life in that era.Don't rent/buy unless you are a student of Mongolian cinema, in which it is interesting. If you force a friend to see this, chance are he won't be your friend anymore afterwards.
Armand result of its director ambition to present complete portrait of Temujin, it is not a good or bad movie but only vehicle for few beautiful images. because its bad luck is the temptation to compare with Mongol. than, the desire to build a large fresco. and not the last, the low budget and the not inspired solutions. so, no surprises. only a well known show, with the same ingredients, with a decent cast, out of reasonable message, interesting for few scenes who reminds others from real meritorious movies. it is not a bad option for viewer but it could not be a revelation. it has only the gift to present slices of a story and a lot of noble intentions. but the absence of measure, the error to not create a small film about the life of hero as puzzle of symbols is a sin in this case.
Jarl Ostbye I study the migration and history of different people. The will of ghenghis khan is one of the the most accurate historical movies of all time down to the smallest detail. All names, customs, armour and weapons are correct. You can tell this movie has been worked on a lot. Enormous effort has been put into this movie, with sublime photography, physical sets and good/decent acting. It even has references to previous civilizations such as the Skytic* people and northern mythology*. *Ghenghis khan wears a pendant with the shape of Thor's hammer, and the top of the flags used in battle end in a trident commonly used in Skytia magnum. I enjoyed this movie a lot and i hope you find this review helpful.
OttoVonB Hollywood's labyrinthine logic dictates that you can wait years and years for a film about a given topic (asteroid hitting the Earth, Alexander the Great) and, lo and behold, suddenly two will come along. One will invariably trump the other, or even beat it to the screen and throw its production into limbo (the Alexander case). It seems the same rule now applies to global film-making.The last 3 years have seen two Russian directors try to bring the great Mongol Khan's story to the screen. The result was, on one hand, the epic "Mongol" and this smaller-budgeted offering. Borissov's film suffers by comparison on almost every level: inferior cast, smaller budget and a perplexing wish to cram a huge, complex life story into 2 hours.There are a few arresting images: a line of monks kneeling to be decapitated, riderless horses charging in battle - someone's been watching Sergei Bondarchuck's War and Peace - and the smaller moments. And yet, net balance is negative: Borissov insist on playing by epic Hollywood rules and those attempts end in failure, chiefly because of what looks like obvious digital photography (that or very bad lenses). While the film is never as ugly as Michael Mann's Public Enemies, it acts as a painful reminder that the technology still has not fully matured to the point where it can carry a period piece on an epic canvas.All in all, not a complete waste of time if the subject matter appeals to you, in which case Mongol or the interesting, smaller Mongolian version of the tale by Saifu Mailisi (check Amazon.uk). Or maybe John Milius' long awaited version...