7.1 | / 10 |
| Users | 0.0 | |
| Reviewer | 4.0 | |
| Overall | 4.0 |
Set in Rome’s culturally diverse Piazza Vittorio neighborhood, the film unfolds in the vibrant, multi-ethnic heart of the Italian capital, where two seemingly opposite lives collide. One is the son of a debt-ridden restaurant owner who vanished with his lover; the other is a mysterious young woman newly arrived in Rome, desperately searching for her missing sister. Fate binds them together as they’re thrust into the dangerous underworld of Rome’s criminal slums. To survive, they must fight side by side in a high-stakes, no-holds-barred adventure—battling brutal gangs as well as confronting deep-rooted prejudices and cultural barriers.
Starring: Yaxi Liu, Enrico Borello, Sabrina Ferilli, Marco Giallini, Shanshan Chunyu| Foreign | Uncertain |
| Martial arts | Uncertain |
| Thriller | Uncertain |
| Drama | Uncertain |
| Romance | Uncertain |
| Action | Uncertain |
Video codec: HEVC / H.265
Video resolution: 4K (2160p)
Aspect ratio: 2.39:1
Original aspect ratio: 2.39:1
Italian: Dolby Atmos
Italian: Dolby TrueHD 7.1
Mandarin: Dolby Atmos
Mandarin: Dolby TrueHD 7.1
Italian: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
Mandarin: DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
English SDH, French
Blu-ray Disc
Single disc (1 BD)
4K Ultra HD
Slipcover in original pressing
Region A (B, C untested)
| Movie | 3.5 | |
| Video | 0.0 | |
| Audio | 5.0 | |
| Extras | 0.0 | |
| Overall | 4.0 |
This film's title along with its key cover art and the very fact that it's being released on disc by Well Go USA might understandably lead some to believe this is a "typical" wuxia outing from a home media label known for such efforts. While The Forbidden City does in fact work a considerable amount of martial arts action into the proceedings while also offering what might be called a female ronin type (which the internet informs me are called onna-musha or onna-bugeisha), the film's title does not refer to a royal complex but instead to a restaurant fronting a brothel, and the narrative actually unfolds mostly in Rome rather than China in a contemporary rather than historical time frame. This is in fact perhaps the first film I've personally reviewed that offers a soundtrack in both Italian and Mandarin, something that in and of itself gives the production some distinctive interest.


Note: While this is a standalone 4K release without a 1080 disc, I am offering screenshots from Well Go USA's standalone 1080 release of The Forbidden City as I think it actually provides a better
representation of the look of the palette in particular, rather than offering screenshots from the 4K disc which are by necessity downscaled to 1080 and
in SDR. Because this release does not include a 1080 disc, the 2K video score above has been intentionally left blank.
The Forbidden City is presented in 4K UHD courtesy of Well Go USA with an HEVC / H.265 encoded 2160p transfer in 2.39:1. The IMDb lists
the Arri Alexa Mini and a 4K DI as the relevant data points. If the above mentioned John Wick built a franchise palette out of teals and
purples, The Forbidden City (while not a franchise, yet anyway) does much the same thing out of reds and blues (some of the blues
admittedly can creep toward teal territory, as seen in screenshot 5 here). Interestingly,
then, the Dolby Vision / HDR grades actually first get to supply some interesting highlights in more neutral tones like beiges and ochres during the brief
opening vignette with the sisters as children. The HDR grades also give the first example of improved shadow detail even at this early stage during a
brief moment where one of the girls needs to be hidden away in a closet to escape detection. Once the story moves ahead a couple of decades and
gets to Rome, the palette starts to pretty much explode in various ways, with several early action sequences bathed in reds and blues, with a perhaps
commendably surprising lack of depletion of fine detail. Detail levels are typically excellent throughout, but it's the palette that really helps to define
the "look" of this feature, and it's rather spectacularly rendered in this 4K UHD edition. Digital grain is apparent but never overwhelming, which is
another big plus in my estimation.

Our audio specs only allow for one primary language, which in the case of The Forbidden City is somewhat misleading. While it's probably arguable that Italian takes the upper hand here, there is still quite a bit of Mandarin, and in fact one of the running issues of the story is our focal pair using translation apps on phones to try to understand each other. For that reason, I've listed both languages above. One way or the other, the Atmos mix is consistently immersive, at least after things get to contemporary times and Rome. The action sequences may not quite match some of the frenetic sonic activity of the John Wick films, but they often come close, and there are some fantastically immersive moments with both discrete channelization and some whip pan effects that really add to the energy. A number of crowd scenes and even a concert of sorts enter the fray, all of which provide further opportunities for nicely engaged side and rear channels. Dialogue is rendered cleanly and clearly throughout. Optional English and French subtitles are available.

In what seems to be a new standard operating procedure for Well Go USA with their standalone 4K and 1080 releases of the same title, this 4K edition does not feature the trailer that the 1080 disc does, but on the other hand it also doesn't have the prefatory previews that the 1080 disc does. Like the 1080 release, this also features a slipcover, though note that art choices are different for the two releases.

There are some undeniably cliché ridden aspects to this tale, especially in a couple of late reveals that anyone worth their "twist" salt is going to see from a mile off, but those predicable elements are probably easily outweighed by an unusual story context and especially these two particular characters. The film is probably too long by a half hour or more, but when it's kicking on all gears (kicking being the operative term), it really connects both on the action side of things but maybe even more importantly with some actual human emotion. Technical merits are solid and The Forbidden Kingdom comes Recommended.