The Flowers of War

The Flowers of War
Theatrical release poster
Traditional Chinese金陵十三釵
Simplified Chinese金陵十三钗
Literal meaningThirteen Hairpins of Jinling
Hanyu PinyinJīnlíng shísān chāi
Directed byZhang Yimou
Written byLiu Heng
Based on13 Flowers of Nanjing
by Geling Yan
Produced byWilliam Kong
David Linde
Zhang Weiping
Zhang Yimou
Brandt Andersen
StarringChristian Bale
Ni Ni
Tong Dawei
Atsuro Watabe
CinematographyZhao Xiaoding
Edited byPeicong Meng
Music byQigang Chen
Production
companies
New Pictures Film Corporation
Row 1 Productions
Distributed byEdko Films (Hong Kong)
Release dates
  • December 16, 2011 (2011-12-16) (China)
  • January 19, 2012 (2012-01-19) (Hong Kong)
  • January 20, 2012 (2012-01-20) (United States)
Running time
146 minutes
CountriesChina
Hong Kong
LanguagesMandarin
Cantonese
English
Japanese
Budget$94 million
Box office$98.2 million

The Flowers of War (Chinese: 金陵十三钗, Pinyin: Jīnlíng Shísān Chāi ) is a 2011 historical drama war film directed by Zhang Yimou, starring Christian Bale, Ni Ni, Zhang Xinyi, Tong Dawei, Atsuro Watabe, Shigeo Kobayashi and Cao Kefan. A Chinese-Hong Kong co-production, the film is based on a novella by Geling Yan, 13 Flowers of Nanjing, inspired by the diary of Minnie Vautrin. The story is set in Nanjing, China, during the 1937 Nanjing Massacre in the Second Sino-Japanese War. A group of escapees, finding sanctuary in a church compound, try to survive the Japanese atrocities.

It was selected as the Chinese entry for Best Foreign Language Film at the 84th Academy Awards, but did not make the final shortlist. It also received a nomination for the 69th Golden Globe Awards. The 6th Asian Film Awards presented The Flowers of War with several individual nominations, including Best Film. The film's North American distribution rights were acquired by Wrekin Hill Entertainment, in association with Row 1 Productions, leading to an Oscar-qualifying limited release in New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco in late December 2011, with general release in January 2012.

The Flowers of War received mixed reviews from critics and was a box office bomb, grossing only $98 million against a $94 million budget.