80 Time | Mary Pols When a mild-mannered peasant unsheathes the powers he has long kept hidden, the results can be spectacular. The same can be said for Peter Chan Ho-sun's Dragon, a martial-arts morality play as lithe as it is forceful. Read full review
80 Village Voice | Nick Pinkerton The roaring popular success of Peter Chan's Wu xia in China - renamed Dragon for export - is no mystery: It's an adept genre exercise with rare primal depths. Read full review
75 New York Post | Farran Smith Nehme It's never dull though, and the familiar characters and stock motivations are convincingly put across. And there's always Xu, who's turned to acupuncture to suppress his empathy, as you wait for the inevitable moment when suppressing it won't be enough. Read full review
70 Los Angeles Times | Robert Abele Dragon has enough interesting left turns in style, mood and psychodrama to make it stand out. Read full review