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9.7.07 - 10.31.07 UCLA Film & Television Archive and CalArts present NEW CHINESE CINEMA New Chinese Cinema: The Unofficial Stories of Tang Tang, Piggy, Little Moth and Others
For this latest edition of the UCLA Film & Television Archive's New Chinese Cinema series, we are pleased to welcome the California Institute of the Arts (CalArts) as a partner and to expand the biennial series into a cross-town venture: with Archive screenings at the Billy Wilder Theater and CalArts screenings at the Roy and Edna Disney/CalArts Theater (REDCAT).
The programmatic geography has changed as well—from an exclusive focus on Mainland China to a selection that encompasses Hong Kong and Taiwan, both of whose cinemas the Archive has also presented in years past but in discrete film series. By changing from a territorial framework of "national cinema" to a pan-Chinese, regional one, we recognize not only the transnational movement and exchange of people, capital, ideas and commodities that has been a defining economic and social verity of the formerly "three," now "two Chinas" for over 20 years (indeed ever since the Deng Xiaoping-orchestrated "opening" of Mainland China to capitalist development in 1978), but also the cultural and historical ties that bind across the divides of Chinese polity.
Hong Kong's "one country, two systems" reunification with the Mainland is now ten-years-old. A decade prior to 1997, Hong Kong New Wave director Ann Hui made news by shooting The Romance of Book and Sword (1987) on location in Mainland China. Fast forward two decades and Hui's wonderfully tragic-comic The Post-Modern Life of My Aunt is one of a number of mainstream box-office successes to feature mixed casts of Hong Kong (Chow Yun-fat) and Mainland stars (Siqin Gaowa).
Low-cost digital cameras meanwhile have fueled the rise of independent Mainland Chinese auteurs far from the traditional filmmaking hub of Beijing. In this post-Sixth Generation era, China's provincial heartland has made a comeback onscreen with a grim industrial vengeance, shorn of any allegorical cloaking in the feudal past, as the Fifth Generation films set in rural China were wont to do. Be it mercenary calculation substituting for blood relations in the astounding Little Moth, or the mobster travesty of village governance in Trouble Makers, Mainland China's independent cinema remains insistently in the present.
Oddly enough this cinema's penchant for deep focus shots, long takes and documentary-inflected realism—evidenced in the work of renowned Sixth Generation filmmaker Jia Zhangke (Still Life, Dong and Ten Years)—mark it if not as the stylistic heir to the New Taiwan Cinema, then certainly as the earlier movement's spiritual kin.
Alas, Chinese cinema lost one of its keenest chroniclers of modernity and the rapid social transformations experienced in the region in recent years with the passing this July of the New Taiwan Cinema master Edward Yang. On October 19, we pay homage to his memory with the revival screening of the director's cut of his masterpiece, A Brighter Summer Day.
Special thanks to: Li Yang, Peng Kaili, Zhang Hui, Cui Zi'en, Teresa Kwong, Qi Wang. Friday October 5 2007, 7:30PM ( Online Ticket Sales Ended )
Los Angeles Premiere STILL LIFE (SAN XIA HAO REN) (2006, China/Hong Kong) Directed by Jia Zhangke Awarded a Golden Lion at the 2006 Venice Film Festival, Still Life entertains with Dong the same relationship as Unknown Pleasures (Ren Xiao Yao, 2002) does with In Public (2001). In both cases the architecture and layout of public spaces (and in Still Life/Dong, their ruins) function as a metaphor for the mental state of fictional characters; in both cases the documentary came first. Before leaving for the Three Gorges Dam where he intended to paint giant portraits of migrant workers, the painter Liu Xiaodong had invited Jia to come and make a documentary about his work. Jia recalls: "the reality brought me into a trance… as I was looking at the ruins left after the dismantling and the lands that were to be submerged and the soaring new towns in the distance… When shooting… the documentary, looking through the viewfinder and watching the people… I started imagining their lives outside the scene."
While most people are forced to leave Fengjie, Jia unfolds the intertwining (yet never intersecting) stories of two people who arrive in the soon-to-be-flooded city. A coal miner from the countryside (Jia's cousin, Han Sanming), finds a job as a demolition worker so he can stay in the area to look for his estranged wife, a former runaway child bride. Or is he staying to be reunited with his grown-up daughter? A sophisticated young nurse from Shanxi (Jia's homegrown star, Zhao Tao) enlists the help of an archeologist (Wang Hongwei, the eponymous Xiao Wu) to locate her elusive engineer husband. Is it because she misses him or does she have another agenda?
Undoubtedly aware that the relationship between documentary and fiction that haunts his work has reached a new level of crystallization, Jia expressed the wish that Still Life and Dong be shown together. We are proud to be able to present such an event. Screenwriter: Jia Zhangke. Cinematographer: Yu Likwai. Music: Lim Giong. Cast: Zhao Tao, Han Sanming. Presented in Mandarin and Sichuan dialogue with English subtitles. 35mm, 108 min. Friday October 5 2007, 9:40PM ( Online Ticket Sales Ended )
US Premiere DONG (2006, China) Directed by Jia Zhangke
Known in the international art market for his monumental, fractured paintings, Liu Xiaodong (nicknamed "Dong," which also means "East") is known to lovers of Chinese cinema for having starred in a fictionalization of his own life in Wang Xiaoshuai's The Days (Dongchun De Rizi, 1993). He was also the art director for Zhang Yuan's Beijing Bastards (Beijing Zazhong, 1993), and had a cameo in Jia's The World (Shijie, 2004). Planning a diptych called "Hotbed," Liu invited Jia to make a documentary about his working process. The first volet took the painter and the film crew to the Three Gorges area, as demolition workers were coming from all over China, living in precarious conditions, to tear down the towns and cities soon to be flooded by the construction of the dam.
Profoundly moved by the site, Jia imagined a new fiction film—Still Life—to take place in that location, shot both the documentary, Dong, and Still Life at the same time, slightly fictionalizing the documentary (Still Life actor Han Sanming became a sitter for Liu and ended up in one of his paintings), while anchoring the reality into the fictional narrative. Later Jia followed Liu as he worked on the second volet—the portrait of another marginalized population, young female sex workers in Thailand. A shot of Liu on the boat sailing the Yangtze cuts to another of him on a canal in Bangkok.
While crafting the complex, fascinating portrait of a major Chinese artist at work, Jia raises haunting questions about the relationship between art and reality, and the intertwining of fiction and documentary that is at the core of his oeuvre. He wanted to show Dong and Still Life together. We are happy to fulfill his wish. Producer: Yu Likwai, Zhu Jiong. Cinematographer: Yu Likwai, Jia Zhangke, Chow Chi-sang, Tian Li. Music: Lim Giong. Cast: Liu Xiaodong. Presented in Chinese dialogue with English subtitles. HDcam, 70 min. Saturday October 6 2007, 7:30PM ( Online Ticket Sales Ended )
US Premiere EYE IN THE SKY (GUN CHUNG) (2007) Directed by Yau Nai-hoi The films produced by Johnnie To's Milky Way Company are fascinating studies of the topography of Hong Kong Island, the mean streets of Kowloon or the falsely quaint hide-outs of Macau. For his directorial debut, Yau Nai-hoi, the noted screenwriter of PTU (2003), Running on Karma (2003) and Election (2005), explores the intricate maze of the Central area of Hong Kong with the love and intimate knowledge of a native son. Through his skilled mise en scène, this cluttered urban texture becomes a series of signs to be deciphered: every street corner, every small event, every step out of line, is pregnant with hidden meaning and possible menace.
And the cops of the Surveillance Unit (SU—code name: "eye in the sky") aren't the only ones on the look-out. Master criminal Shan (Tony Leung) is as adept at reading signs and outsmarting his opponents as is ace cop "Dog Head" (Simon Lam). The outcome of this suspenseful cat-and-mouse game will eventually turn on who leaves traces, who does not, and who can turn an image into a clue. Shan pays for his MTR (subway) entrance with small change to leave no record of his wanderings, while one of his not-so-smart acolytes (Lam Suet) buys junk food at his local 7/11 with the omnipresent "Octopus card"—a rechargeable "smart card" that denotes Hong Kong modernity, but whose transactions can be traced by computer. Meanwhile, Dog Head's rookie-in-training (Kate Tsui), a little taken aback at being given the code name "Piggy," quickly masters the tricks of the trade: from taking pictures of a suspect with her cell phone and tailing a criminal while passing as a helpless female, to disregarding orders from headquarters—in the grand tradition of any self-respecting cop movie. A treat for the eyes and the mind! Producer: Johnnie To, Tsui Siu-ming. Screenplay: Yau Nai-hoi, Au Kin-yee. Music: Guy Zerafa. Cast: Simon Yam, Tony Leung Kar-fai. Presented in Cantonese dialogue with English subtitles. 35mm, 90 min. Sunday October 7 2007, 7:00PM* ( Online Ticket Sales Ended )
Los Angeles Premiere FLOATING (PIAO) (2005, China) Directed by Huang Weikai Yang is a long-haired, alt-rock street musician in Guangzhou, a charming slacker who espouses a languorous attitude towards his music, his girlfriends and the cops. More often than not lounging on his back like a leather-jacketed odalisque—on the scraggly grass of an urban park or propped against his Teletubbies bedframe—Yang speculates about how to retrieve his confiscated guitar from the Urban Management Bureau, coaches his buddies on how insulting a girl is the best way to keep her, and plots elaborate pranks on the local police involving calls to the suicide hotline.
But Yang's nonchalance masks defiance. Like millions of other rural migrants to China's urban centers, Yang could be summarily arrested and deported at any moment in accordance with the "Regulation on the Detention and Repatriation of Vagrants and Beggars in Cities." The 1982 law lays bare the flagrant disparities of China's economic miracle, where burgeoning cities have become Meccas to a displaced rural underclass. With glorious intimacy, Huang Weikai's oblique documentary camera captures the contradictions of this hipster anti-hero who saunters dangerously through a "sleepwalking" existence, at the mercy of a government he refuses to take seriously. Camera: Huang Weikai. Editor: Huang Weikai. Cast: Yang Jiwei. Presented in Mandarin dialogue with English subtitles. DVcam, 93 min. US Premiere BETELNUT (BINGLANG) (2006, China) Directed by Yang Heng One hot summer in a small southern town by a river, two young loafers idle away their time stealing mopeds, frequenting internet cafes, singing drunken karaoke with the boys, getting into scrapes with other boys, hanging out on a river barge and falling in love. The objects of their desire are two young women, both of whom eventually prove to be "unattainable" because one already has a boyfriend and the other harbors a yen to leave the provinciality of Hunan for the bright lights even further south in Shenzhen. Echoing I Vitelloni—Betelnut's setting is a town bounded by water that is also the filmmaker's hometown—by way of Jia Zhangke, this gently observational portrait of youthful aimlessness also displays a precision of composition and pacing startling for a first feature. Producer: Zhu Rikun. Screenplay: Yang Heng. Camera: Yang Heng. Cast: Tian Li, Liang Yu. Presented in Mandarin dialogue with English subtitles. DVcam, 112 min. * Please note the early start time. Wednesday October 17 2007, 7:30PM ( Online Ticket Sales Ended )
TROUBLE MAKERS (GUANGRONGDE FENNU) (2006, China) Directed by Cao Baoping A backwater hole of a village, appropriately called Blackwell, is under the thumb of the four Xiong Brothers, who are salt traffickers, rapists, corrupt officials holding a monopoly on power in the village and relentless profiteers. Promoted to be the local Party Secretary so he can be the brothers' fall guy, Ye Guangrong smiles to their face, but is seething inside. (The Chinese title is "Guangrong's Fury," and the original English title was "The Glorious Fury.") Unable to fight this new "Gang of Four" through official channels, he assembles a colorful posse of riff-raff, thugs, coarse peasants and honest villagers who are simply fed up. And then they start to fight dirty. Really dirty. It's a men's story (women are kept in the background, mostly as victims), with an accompanying deluge of insults, foul language and obscenities—a rare and fascinating instance in Chinese cinema. One of the thugs, who's enamored with kung fu, that Guangrong recruits into his rebel militia is known by the sweet monicker of "Dog Balls." The film is suffused with a Rabelaisian poetry of vulgarity and joyful playfulness, but also a somber streak—as tragedy, limited horizons and backward sexual politics keep seeping under the humor, in a way that brings to mind the Jim Thompson of The Killer Inside Me or Pop 1280. In spite of its happy ending, this dark comedy had to wait a long time before being approved by the censors. Unrest in the countryside, villager riots, peasant revolts—these are current Chinese realities that the powers-that-be don't like to talk about. For his first feature, screenwriter-turned-director Cao Baoping demonstrates an absolute mastery of the medium, with a rigorous mise en scène that produces a claustrophobic feeling, uncanny for a depiction of the countryside. The acting is excellent, especially Wu Gang as Guangrong, a first-rate actor too often underestimated. Based on 'Village Operation' by Que Diwei. Producer: Zhang Yaoli, Cao Baoping, Cindy M. Li. Screenwriter: Cao Baoping. Cinematographer: Tao Shiwei. Art Director: Lou Pan. Editor: Cao Baoping. Cast: Wu Gang, Li Xiaobo. Presented in Mandarin dialogue with English subtitles. 35mm, 103 min. Friday October 19 2007, 7:30PM ( Online Ticket Sales Ended )
A Tribute to Edward Yang A BRIGHTER SUMMER DAY—DIRECTOR'S CUT (GULING JIE SHAONIAN SHA REN SHIJIAN) (1991, Taiwan) Born in Shanghai in 1947, Edward Yang moved with his family to Taiwan as a little boy. After studying engineering in the US, he became, with his colleague Hou Hsiao-hsien, one of the founders and luminaries of the "New Taiwan Cinema" of the 1980s that marked a renaissance in the country's culture. As Hou focused more on small towns and the countryside, Yang became the poet of the tremendous changes undergone by Taipei. He had a keen eye for discovering talent. He gave Chris Doyle his first job as a DP on That Day on the Beach (1983), Yang's own first feature. Later, as he was preparing A Brighter Summer Day, he cast and trained a 13-year-old teenager, Zhang Zhen, who reappears in his later film, Mahjong (1996), and, as "Chang Chen," became internationally famous for his roles in Wong Kar-wai's Happy Together (1997), Ang Lee's Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000) and Tian Zhuangzhuang's The Go Master (2006). Inspired by the story of a murder committed by one of Yang's schoolmates, A Brighter Summer Day (1991) is considered the director's magnum opus. We are grateful to the Yang family for allowing us to organize this screening of the rarely shown director's cut of the film.
In the 1960s, Taipei, though semi-rural, is struggling with a rapidly advancing modernity. Kids listen to Elvis Presley and join street gangs. Between them and the generation of their parents—displaced by the Chinese civil war and the Kuomintang's retreat to Taiwan—lies a tragic gap that only emotional excess and violence can fill… Young Si'er falls hard for Ming, a lovely, endearing and complex girl of "questionable" reputation who happens, alas, to "belong" to the leader of a rival gang. More Carmen than Romeo and Juliet, the film is also that rare authentically tender representation of ill-fated teenage love.
Introduced by John Anderson, film critic and author of Edward Yang(2005) Producer: Yu Weiyan. Screenwriter: Edward Yang, Yan Hongya, Yang Shunqing, Lai Mingtang. Cinematographer: Zhang Huigong. Dialogue: Edward Yang. Art Director: Yu Weiyan, Edward Yang. Editor: Chen Bowen. Cast: Lisa Yang, Zhang Zhen, Zhang Guozhu, Elaine Jin. Presented in Mandarin dialogue with English subtitles. 35mm, 237 min. Saturday October 20 2007, 7:30PM ( Online Ticket Sales Ended )
US Premiere LITTLE MOTH (XUE CHAN) (2007, China) Directed by Peng Tao "I found a girl for you," says Uncle to his nephew Luo Jiang. "She's 11-years-old. She can't walk." Luo pays 1,000 yuan ($125) for her so she can be used to beg in the street. Begging is a trade like any other—with its own rules, territories and rackets—and this is what the artificial family formed by Luo, his wife Guihua and Xiao Ezi ("Little Moth") does for a living. "I wanted to show the unique status of people living at the bottom of the Chinese social ladder," says first-time director Peng Tao, who spent weeks in the mountains of Hubei Province, selecting non-professional actors from whom he extracts sober, compelling performances. His restrained, semi-ethnographic style that calls to mind Hou Hsiao-hsien's first movies suggests more than shows, and unfolds the complexity of characters who may be "rough" and "uncouth," who don't speak much, but communicate through daily gestures (cooking, sharing food or drinks, dressing up poor lodgings). The "exploiters" are themselves disenfranchised, marginalized people who, in their never-ending struggle for survival, don't have the opportunity to question the ethics of what they are doing. Guihua displays unexpected signs of affection for Xiao Ezi; the boorish Luo shows real emotion when his wife is missing. On the other hand, "nice" rich people reveal, under the social veneer, their indifference and cruelty.
The children are splendid: neither "cute" not obnoxious, and often silent because they don't have a say about their own fate. Yet the mise en scène makes us share their vision of the world. We sympathize with the soulful eyes of a boy who realizes he is no longer wanted. And, for a haunting moment, we share the gaze of a little girl staring at the off-screen void. Screenplay: Peng Tao. Art Director: Hu Qingsheng. Camera: Huang Yi. Editor: Peng Tao. Cast: Hong Qifa, Han Dequn. Presented in Mandarin dialogue with English subtitles. DigiBeta, 99 min. US Premiere THIRTEEN PRINCESS TREES (SHISANKE PAOTONG) (2006, China) Directed by Lu Yue This bracing look at a year in the lives of a group of high-school delinquents refreshingly features a teenage girl at the center. Feng has trouble at home. Her parents are divorced. Her mother is absent from her life and her father works long hours as a security guard and is embittered. Feng runs with the tough crowd at the titular school. When a new boy transfers from Lhasa, he seems at first to be a roughneck out to intimidate his way to the top of the Princess Trees heap. But the film turns ever so delicately on Feng's change of perspective—the gradual shift of her sexual interest away from the handsome, homegrown gang leader to the pugnacious outsider, whom she comes to see as a kindred soul desperate for love. Lu Yue whose directorial debut Mr. Zhao was screened at the Archive's New Chinese Cinema series in 2000 is also an accomplished cinematographer, best-known for his work with Zhang Yimou on Shanghai Triad, Joan Chen on Xiu Xiu: The Sent-Down Girl, and now, John Woo, on the forthcoming Red Cliff. Based on 'Blade vs. Blade' by He Dacao. Screenplay: Lu Yue, Ying Liu. Cinematographer: Xu Wei. Art Director: Zhao Anqi. Music: Liu Suola. Cast: Liu Xin, Zhao Mengqiao. Presented in Mandarin dialogue with English subtitles. 35mm, 98 min. Friday October 26 2007, 7:30PM ( Online Ticket Sales Ended )
West Coast Premiere THE POST-MODERN LIFE OF MY AUNT (YIMADE HOUXIANDAI SHENGHUO) (2006, Hong Kong/China) Directed by Ann Hui In her most radical character study of a woman to date, Ann Hui keeps a fine balance between absurdity, slightly grotesque situations and moments of melancholia to enter the mind of her protagonist. Educated, proper, pristine Ye Rutang (masterfully played by Siqin Gaowa, who does not shy away from adding a few years to her real age) tries to maintain a façade of respectability and kindness, while working hard to make a living. Her Oxford-accented English is no longer in demand with the parents of the kids she tutors, her sense of ethics is constantly violated by the holier-than-thou airs of her hated neighbor, Mrs. Shui (Lisa Lu), and then she meets with a series of tragic-comic mishaps that precipitate her downfall. The most "scandalous" aspect of the story lies in the heroine's dalliance with the mustached Pan Zhichang, symbolized in the film's publicity by a shot of Siqin Gaowa and Chow Yun-fat in bed, smiling. At long last a Chinese film depicting an older woman's sexuality and her relationship with a younger (and charming) man!
Yet in Hui's skilled hands, things are not always what they seem. The expected "love affair" between these two paragons of contemporary Chinese cinema occupies a rather brief amount of screen time and is shown as a collage of funny or embarrassing moments. And, first perceived as a harmless "auntie" lost in the shuffle and bustle of Shanghai modernity, Mrs. Ye becomes a victim of her own recklessness as well as the callousness of others—before her true identity as a bad mother and ultimately an orphan of Chinese history slowly emerges. It is definitely "[Hui's] best made-in-China film yet." (Tony Rayns) Based on a novel by Yan Yan. Screenplay: Li Qiang. Cinematographer: Kwan Pun-leung, Yu Lik-wai. Music: Joe Hisaishi. Cast: Siqin Gaowa, Chow Yun-fat, Vicky Zhao Wei, Lisa Lu. Presented in Mandarin dialogue with English subtitles. 35mm, 110 min.
NEW
CHINESE CINEMA SCREENINGS @ REDCAT
For tickets and further information on REDCAT
screenings, please call the REDCAT box office at 213.237.2800,
or visit www.redcat.org.
Wednesday October 10 2007, 8:00PM
Los Angeles Premiere THE WAYWARD CLOUD (Tian Bian Yi Duo Yun) (2005, Taiwan/France) Directed by Tsai Ming-liang "In drought-stricken Taipei, the feverish, sensual and emotional journey of a two-bit porn actor (Lee Kang-sheng, Tsai’s muse) and a young woman (Chen Shiang-chyi) toward an unexpected amour fou unfolds against a droll and surreal background. This is "the most audacious film to date from visionary director Tsai Ming-liang… As in The Hole (1998), he adds campy musical numbers into the narrative that play against the raw sex scenes, creating a bizarre, existential chaos… His stationary camera perfectly illustrates the isolation and exploitation the characters are trapped in. They are indeed wayward clouds, drifting through life without purpose, in a world without water. And prepare yourself for the film's unbelievable final scene, which manages to be both weirdly erotic and profoundly disturbing." (San Francisco International Film Festival). Thursday October 11 2007, 8:00PM
International
Premiere
FUCK CINEMA (2006, China) Directed by Wu Wenguang
It took real courage for famous documentarist Wu Wenguang to release
this pungent yet moving exploration of the cruel unbalance created by
the booming film industry between the people in power and the perennial
outsiders: a homeless peasant who tries to peddle his script about Beijing;
young girls from the provinces auditioning for the part of a hooker;
a seller of illegal DVDs chased by the police.
– Don’t you see Wu Wenguang is manipulating you, making you run all
around town?
– It does not matter in whose hands I am now, I’m still a puppet.
– Your script is about crowd scene extras?
– Yes, it’s a true story about my life.
– So now you’re working as an extra for Wu Wenguang.
– Much better, I am the leading actor... Preceded by TEN YEARS
(Womende Shinian)
(2007, China) Directed by Jia Zhangke Ten years after the retrocession of Hong Kong to China – a train ride from Taiyuan – a document or a staged metaphor? 35mm, Print courtesy of Cyberport and Digital Media Centre, 8 min. Friday October 12 2007, 8:00PM
Los
Angeles Premiere
TANG TANG (2004, China) Directed by Zhang Hanzi
An alluring mixture of documentary and fiction about the fabulous
nights (sequins, wigs, feathers, high heels, make-up, glittery camp
outfits bought in discount stores), grey mornings and cross-gender
love affairs (here a man, there a lesbian) of a drag queen —sorry, "reversed
role actor"— in Beijing. A certain kernel of truth is forever missed
– more tease than strip here, and the film sometimes takes the spectator
on a ride of cheap thrills. But there are moments (staged or not)
in which the real asserts itself with a quiet violence: an exchange
of gaze between two tired show-girls in a dingy dressing room, two
male lovers buying underwear together, a ride in a taxi, a domestic
quarrel in an unkempt apartment.
U.S.
Premiere
WITHERED IN A BLOOMING SEASON (Shaonian Hua Cao Huang)
(2005, China) Directed by Cui
Zi'en
Looking at post-socialist dysfunctional families, Cui, godfather of
the queer underground, follows Cocteau’s tropes in his description
of a claustrophobic situation between a young girl and the brother
who is obsessed by her – while being attracted to a very gay lad. He
weaves it with the Fassbinder-inspired plot of a hard businesswoman
mother who sleeps with her young staff – and, upon discovering that
the man has impregnated her daughter, forces him to break up with her
on the phone. Mixing melodrama and sassiness, Cui coins a totally queer
story: two boys in bed, a girl near them, a baby en route, grown-ups
are shit, so is the outside world, my sister, my love, my sissy boy,
aren’t we happy?
Saturday
October 13 2007
FESTIVAL AWARD WINNERS MARATHON This program features a quartet of festival award winners focused on questioning gender and family relationships and the place of women in contemporary China.
2:00PM - U.S.
Premiere
BLISS (Fu Sheng) (2006, Hong Kong/China) Directed by Sheng Zhimin
In his second feature Sheng Zhimin – a former assistant to Fruit Chan (who produced the film), as well as Jia Zhangke, Zhang Yang and others – follows the life of old policeman Lao Li’s family, in the city of Chongqing (Sichuan Province). Factories close and Li’s daughter-in-law loses her job, while her husband, a cab-driver, works long hours and mourns an old love affair. As Li receives the ashes of his first wife, his second wife’s teenage son gets mixed with local gangs. A country girl is sold by her family to a brothel, yet discovers love in a scene or perfect lyricism involving an umbrella and a waterfront… In this masterful study of subtle emotional changes, the characters constantly surprise us, and bliss comes in discrete yet illuminating ways. NETPAC Award, Locarno International Film Festival
Asian New Talent Award, Shanghai International Film Festival
4:00PM
GRAIN
IN EAR
(Mang Zhong)
(2005, China/South Korea) Directed by Zhang Lu
Cui Shunji (Liu Lianji), a young Korean-Chinese woman lives with her little
boy on the city outskirts, selling kimchi. Less quietly droll than Tang Poetry
(2003), Grain in Ear finds Zhang Lu entering the territory Fassbinder
once made his own: melodrama with a social conscience, executed with slightly
shell-shocked restraint. The climactic act of revenge is inspired by a real-life
incident, but the context is pure fiction: a social-realist fable which illuminates
the gap between haves and have-nots in ways that Marx never dreamed of. Zhang
still thinks in cine-formalist terms (the camera never moves until the very
end) but he’s clearly edging towards an engagement with drama, with a real
sympathy for his heroine, as long takes and painterly compositions suggest
her complex interior life. – adapted from a text by Tony Rayns.
ACID Award, Cannes Film Festival, International Critics' Week
New Cinema Award, Pesaro Film Festival
Best New Asian Filmmaker of the Year, Pusan International Film Festival, New Currents
7:45PM
- Los Angeles Premiere
DAM STREET
(Hong Yan)
(2005, China) Directed by Li Yu
After shaking the film world with Fish
and Elephant (2001), Li Yu continues to assert herself as a major female voice in Chinese cinema, and explores the plights, troubles and pleasures of women in a changing society. Dam Street deciphers the complex personal life of a young singer in a down-and-out Sichuan opera troupe, Yun (Yi Liu), who was once thrown out of school for getting pregnant in the early ’80s. Now she has to deal with the demons of the past and the challenges of the present. A "fallen woman," she can only rebuke the unsavory advances of businessmen, engage in a hit-and-miss affair with a married man, till an unexpected friendship with a teenage boy forces her to take a different look at herself.
Standard Audience Prize, Vienna Film Festival Print provided by The Global Film Initiative 9:45PM - Los
Angeles Premiere
THE OTHER HALF
(Ling Yiban)
(2006, China) Directed by Ying Liang and Peng Shan
For their second feature following the award-winning Taking
Father Home (2005), the boyfriend-and-girlfriend team
of Ying and Peng made giant leaps. Frontal composition, fractured
narration and a savvy mixture of documentary and fiction show
how sexual impasse and ecological catastrophes intersect in
the Sichuan town of Zigong. "The
Other Half" denotes women who, in Chinese mythology, hold the
vault of the sky; not an easy task, if one follows the travails
of Xiaofen (Zeng Xiaofei), a legal secretary having to deal with
a slacker boyfriend, her mother’s eagerness to find her a husband,
the victimization of women by her law firm and an industrialist’s
ruthless contempt for the welfare of his workers and the safety
of his town. "The Other Half is one hell of a beautiful
film." – Variety
Special Jury Prize KODAK VISION AWARD, Tokyo, Filmex
Special Jury Award, Jeonju International Film Festival Special Jury Award, Singapore International Film Festival
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