Mountain Patrol

 

Mountain Patrol (Kekexili) (2006)

50
NEUTRAL
Various
Movie Reviews94%
PG-13
2004, Drama, 1h 30m
RT Critics’ Score: 98% (UNBIASED)
RT Audience Score: 90%
Awards & Nominations: 21 wins & 22 nominations

 

Critics Consensus

In a setting both visually stunning and cruel, this Eastern film evokes the epic spirit of old-fashioned Westerns.
 

Audience Consensus

Mountain Patrol: Kekexili is a movie that will take your breath away, both figuratively and literally. The stunning scenery and intense chase scenes will leave you in awe, while the environmental message will make you want to hug a tree (or at least recycle). It’s like Moby Dick, but with yaks instead of whales. And if you’re not convinced yet, there’s a scene where a guy gets sucked into quicksand. Need I say more?
 
Movie Trailer

50

Movie Info

Storyline

The Tibetan Mountain Patrol, a self-sponsored outcast regimen established to eliminate illegal slaughtering of endangered Tibetan Antelopes by impoverished local and out-of-province peasants, intimately engages with a half-Tibetan journalist from Beijing in a desolate depiction of human nature in the outskirts of Kekexili.

 
Production Company(ies)
Columbia Pictures, Huayi Brothers Media, National Geographic World Films,
 
Distributor
NA
 
Release Type

 
Filming Location(s)
China
 
MPAA / Certificate
Rated PG-13 for violence and disturbing images, brief sexuality and language
 
Year of Release
2004
 

Technical Specs
  • Color:
    Color
  • Sound mix:
    Dolby Digital
  • Aspect ratio:
    2.35 : 1
  • Runtime:
    NA
  • Language(s):
    Mandarin, Tibetan
  • Country of origin:
    United States
  • Release date:
    Release Date (Streaming): Aug 29, 2006

 
Genre(s)
Drama
 
Keyword(s)
Mountain Patrol: Kekexili, starring Duobujie, Zhang Lei, Qi Liang, Xueying Zhao, directed by Chuan Lu, written by Chuan Lu, drama, PG-13 rating, box office gross of $142.2K, reviewed by Marrit Ingman, Steven Rea, Robert Denerstein, Bruce Westbrook, John Hartl, Roger Ebert, Panos Kotzathanasis, Rob Humanick, Jeffrey Chen, Eric D Snider, Jack Garner, Phil Villarreal, endangered antelope, poaching, Tibet, volunteer patrolmen, environmental awareness, spiritual mindfulness, Western, true story, Dolby Digital, Yang Du, Zhonglei Wang, Aug 29 2006, 1h 30m, Chinese language
 

Box Office Details

Worldwide gross: $185,920
Worldwide gross (inflation-adjusted): $293,286
Worldwide gross ranking (inflation-adjusted): 2,860
Worldwide tickets sold (est.): 31,983
 
US/Canada gross: $143,383
US/Canada gross (inflation-adjusted): $226,185
US/Canada gross ranking (inflation-adjusted): 2,523
US/Canada opening weekend: $16,915
US/Canada opening weekend (inflation-adjusted): $26,683
US/Canada opening weekend ranking (inflation-adjusted): 2,410
 
Budget and Earnings Details
Production budget (est.): CN¥10,000,000
Production budget (inflation-adjusted): NA
Production budget ranking: NA
Marketing and distribution budget (inflation-adjusted est.): NA
Box office net earnings to date (inflation-adjusted est.): NA
ROI to date (est.): NA
ROI ranking: NA

 
Movie Cast & Crew

Cast & Crew

DuobujieRi TaiZhang LeiGa YuQi Liang
Duobujie
Ri Tai
Zhang Lei
Ga Yu
Qi Liang
Duobujie
Zhang Lei
Qi Liang
Xueying Zhao
Ma Zhanlin
Duobujie – Ri Tai
Zhang Lei – Ga Yu
Qi Liang – Liu Dong
Xueying Zhao – Leng Xue
Ma Zhanlin
Gensong Yongcuo
Yang Jin

 

Chuan LuChuan LuYang DuZhonglei Wang
Chuan Lu
Chuan Lu
Yang Du
Zhonglei Wang
Director
Writer
Producer
Producer
Producer

Director(s)
Chuan Lu
 
Writer(s)
Chuan Lu
 
Producer(s)
Yang Du, Zhonglei Wang

 
Movie Reviews & Awards
Film Festivals

 
Awards & Nominations
21 wins & 22 nominations
 
Academy Awards

 

Top Reviews
Marrit IngmanSteven ReaRobert DenersteinBruce WestbrookJohn Hartl
Marrit Ingman
Steven Rea
Robert Denerstein
Bruce Westbrook
John Hartl
Austin Chronicle
Philadelphia Inquirer
Denver Rocky Mountain News
Houston Chronicle
Seattle Times
MOUNTAIN PATROL: KEKEXILI
  All Critics (50) | Top Critics (23) | Fresh (49) | Rotten (1)
  Mixes environmental awareness and spiritual mindfulness with its chase scenes through grand scenery.
 
  June 3, 2006 | Rating: 3/5
 
  Marrit Ingman
  Austin Chronicle
  TOP CRITIC
  Breathtakingly beautiful, breathtakingly brutal and simply breathtaking.
 
  May 26, 2006 | Rating: 3.5/4
 
  Steven Rea
  Philadelphia Inquirer
  TOP CRITIC
  Much of the time, the movie plays like a catalog of challenges sprawled over terrain so forbidding that you can’t watch it without feeling a steep measure of awe.
 
  May 19, 2006 | Rating: B
 
  Robert Denerstein
  Denver Rocky Mountain News
  TOP CRITIC
  Instead of a laudable ecological crusade, the film feels more like a futile Captain Ahab obsession, with patrol leader Ri Tai (Duobujie) vainly chasing a poaching kingpin through the harsh, windy wilderness.
 
  May 12, 2006 | Rating: 1.5/4
 
  Bruce Westbrook
  Houston Chronicle
  TOP CRITIC
  One of the most beautiful and disturbing widescreen epics in last year’s Seattle International Film Festival.
 
  May 5, 2006 | Rating: 3.5/4
 
  John Hartl
  Seattle Times
  TOP CRITIC
  What is remarkable is that this film is based on a true story, and filmed on the actual locations.
 
  May 5, 2006 | Rating: 3.5/4
 
  Roger Ebert
  Chicago Sun-Times
  TOP CRITIC
  Lu Chuan uses a rather unique approach for his narrative, combining elements of documentary , road movie, and western
 
  January 19, 2020
 
  Panos Kotzathanasis
  Asian Movie Pulse
  An ode to the great sacrifices that often accompany the will to do the right thing.
 
  November 5, 2007 | Rating: B+
 
  Rob Humanick
  Projection Booth
  Moby Dick with a progressive spin.
 
  October 13, 2006 | Rating: 8/10
 
  Jeffrey Chen
  Window to the Movies
  August 14, 2006 | Rating: 4/5
 
  Eric D. Snider
  EricDSnider.com
  One of those films that opens eyes to distant lands and problems and yet carries a sense of drama and a humane moral tone that conveys an appeal that’s simultaneously exotic and universal.
 
  July 28, 2006 | Rating: 8/10
 
  Jack Garner
  Rochester Democrat and Chronicle
  The film’s most memorable visual spectacle, of a man getting sucked into a pool of quicksand, is also the most resonant. Man may think he rules over nature, but it can take him back at any moment.
 
  July 6, 2006 | Rating: 3/4
 
  Phil Villarreal
  Arizona Daily Star…

 
Movie Plot & More
Plot
The Tibetan Mountain Patrol, a self-sponsored outcast regimen established to eliminate illegal slaughtering of endangered Tibetan Antelopes by impoverished local and out-of-province peasants, intimately engages with a half-Tibetan journalist from Beijing in a desolate depiction of human nature in the outskirts of Kekexili.
 
Trivia

 
Goofs / Tidbits
The film features a cast of mostly non-professional actors, with many of the patrolmen playing themselves.
 
Movie Links Wikipedia and Rotten Tomatoes

Links
Wikipedia: Go to Wiki
Rotten Tomatoes: Go to RT

 
Where to Watch

Where to Watch

 
Move the ScoreChuan-Lu.jpg

Movies, Streaming