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Sydney Film Festival
Recent films from China: Shower and Seventeen Years
By Richard Phillips
2 August 2000
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The Sydney Film Festival screened two movies from China this
year: Shower and Seventeen Years. Both filmsthe
first a light comedy, the second about a female prisoner and an
emotional reunion with her parents after 17 yearsreflect
the response of some Chinese directors to the difficult political
conditions in which they work.
The Beijing regime, which is acutely nervous about rigorous
artistic work or social commentary, controls virtually all aspects
of film production in China. The government's Film Bureau vets
scripts, decides when, and if, the finished films can be screened,
and whether they can be shown at foreign film festivals. Film
directors who have a more honest or artistically probing approach
are regularly censored or prevented from making films.
A recent example is Jiang Wen's latest film, Devils on the
Doorstep. The three-hour movie, which deals with the Japanese
occupation of China in the 1930s, recently won the Grand Jury
prize at the Cannes Film Festival. According to Beijing, Devils
on the Doorstep is anti-Chinese. Jiang has been denounced
for failing to clear the film with the government before taking
it to Cannes. Two government officials even travelled to Cannes
to demand that Jiang hand over a negative of the film and urged
festival organisers not to show it. Devils on the Doorstep
has not been screened in China and according to some reports Jiang
could be barred from filmmaking for seven years.
Directors have responded in different ways to the political
bullying. Some have left the country to practise their craft;
others pursue a delicate balancing act attempting to maintain
their artistic integrity without antagonising the Film Bureau.
Some have adapted to the unfavourable climate and opted to make
insubstantial commercial films.
Shower, directed by 35-year-old Zhang Yang, fits into
the latter category. This occasionally amusing but insubstantial
film, Zhang's second feature, tells the story of an ambitious
son who returns home and begins to understand the wisdom of his
father's old-fashioned values.
Zhang, who graduated from the Central Theatrical Institute
in 1992, came to filmmaking through theatre and music video production.
Spicy Love Soup (1997), his first feature, consists of
five lightweight short stories set in contemporary Beijing. The
film was a financial success in China and the soundtrack became
one of the country's largest selling hit records.
Shower begins with Da Ming (Pu Cun Xin), now a successful
businessman in southern China, returning home after many years
assuming that his father has died. His father, Master Liu (Zhu
Xu), however, is not dead. In fact, Liu and Er Ming (Jiang Wu),
Da Ming's mentally handicapped brother, own and operate a traditional
bathhouse in an old part of Beijing frequented by a quirky cast
of characters, who play chess, gossip or generally use it as a
refuge from the outside world.
Da Ming, preoccupied for years with business deals and making
money, has not told his wife, still in south China, about Er Ming.
And while he has little regard for the rundown bathhouse, over
the ensuing weeks Da Ming comes to realise that it provides real
companionship for his ageing father. Liu, however, eventually
dies and the bathhouse and the old suburb are demolished to make
way for a new construction project. The film concludes with Da
Ming deciding to assume responsibility for his retarded brother
and take him to southern China.
While Shower may contain a hint of criticism against
the government's free market policies, this is entirely secondary
to the film's essential message, which is a hackneyed call for
a return to traditional family values.
Shower is one of four new Chinese movies to be released
in Australian cinemas by Columbia Tri-Star over the next six months.
Although greater accessibility to Chinese language films is to
be welcomed, Shower is not so different from the hundreds
of feel-good films churned out every year by Hollywood
and other major producers. Many critics have applauded Zhang's
undemanding films. One, in a dig at those directors who have attempted
to explore social and political issues, has praised Zhang's work
because it is sans peasants, politics or palanquins.
Zhang seems to have found a commercially successful formula and
is sticking to it.
Seventeen Years, directed by Zhang Yuan, deals with
the emotional reconciliation of a female prisoner and her ageing
parents. Touched by a television program on prisoner-family reunions,
Zhang obtained permission from the Chinese judiciary to film inside
a jail. Seventeen Years is an interesting work but not
without its flaws.
Zhang, one of the better-known new filmmakers to have emerged
in China in the last decade, is a leading member of the Sixth
Generation. This is a reference to the period when he graduated
from the Beijing Film Academy, the country's leading film school,
which was shut down during the Cultural Revolution.
The academy's first graduates, after it reopened in 1978, included
Zhang Yimou, Chen Kaige, Hang Jianxin and Tian Zhuangzhuang. Later
known as the Fifth Generation, these directors were
distinguished by their innovative techniques, rich and poetic
cinematography and dramatic tributes to ordinary people. While
the Chinese government banned many of their films, they won a
wide international audience in the late 1980s and opened the way
for other Chinese filmmakers. Sixth Generation directors
were more openly critical of the ruling regime and social life.
Many of their early films were produced without government permission
and circulated on video in China.
Zhang Yuan graduated from the academy in 1989 and made his
first film, Mother, the following year. Since then he has
made four features Beijing Bastards (1992), Sons
(1995), East Palace, West Palace (1996) and Seventeen
Years (1999)as well as several documentaries, including
The Square (1994) and Crazy English (1999). Described
as an urban realist because he attempts to explore aspects of
contemporary city life in China, Zhang's work is regularly screened
at international film festivals.
Seventeen Years, which is based on a true story, begins
at the modest three-room apartment of a poor family of four in
an old and rundown part of the northern Chinese city of Tianjin.
The husband and wife have each been married once before and their
two teenage daughters are from separate marriages. The stepsisters
have completely different personalities. Yu Xiaoqin (Li Juan)
is a diligent student, while her sister, Tao Lan (Liu Lin), is
tough and less interested in school. The two girls, who share
the same bedroom, are frustrated with the constrictive atmosphere
of the poor household and dream about leaving. Because their parents
treat them unequally, the girls have developed an intense rivalry.
One day, Yu Xiaoqin steals the change from her father's grocery
shopping budget and then, after an angry quarrel in the house
over the missing money, places it on her sister's bed. Despite
her protests, Tao Lan is blamed for the theft and denounced by
her parents. Later, as the girls walk to school, they quarrel
and Tao Lan, in a fit of passion, strikes her stepsister on the
head with a heavy wooden pole and flees the scene. Hours later
she returns home to learn that her stepsister has died. Her parents
are so overcome with grief that they cannot speak.
The film then rolls forward to contemporary China and Tianjin
First Prison, the jail that has held Tao Lan for the last 17 years.
She and several other women regarded by the authorities as model
prisoners are given a special weekend release to visit their families.
Tao Lan, who has had no contact with her parents since she entered
the prison, is ambivalent about meeting her mother and father.
Unlike other prisoners, overjoyed with the weekend release, Tao
Lan is afraid and uncertain about whether she can face the outside
world and what it will bring.
No one comes to meet her on release day and Chen Jie (Li Bingbing),
a young female prison guard, offers to take her to the family
apartment. After they discover that the apartment has been demolished,
Chen Jie helps Tao Lan locate her parents' new address. Although
the bewildered prisoner finds the city bustle overwhelming, and
would just as soon go back to the prison, Chen Jie gets her home
late that night. The mother and stepfather have not forgiven their
daughter and at first will only speak to the prison guard. There
is little said, but gradually, and with great difficulty, Tao
Lan and her parents begin to make emotional contact. The 85-minute
film concludes with the years of anger, deep sorrow and other
imprisoned emotions between the daughter and ageing parents starting
to dissolve.
A fair portion of the film is shot inside the 100-year-old
Tianjin First Prison, one of the country's most notorious, and
the first recorded inside a Chinese jail. Zhang makes no overt
criticism of the penal system and the atmosphere inside the prison
is polite and benign. And while this, together with the exceptionally
gentle nature of the young guard, grates for those who know something
about China's jails, these scenes highlight Tao Lan's tragedy.
The now 30-something woman has lost her youth inside the prison
walls because of an angry outburst as a teenager. She is isolated,
lonely and afraid of the outside world.
Zhang has commented that he made Seventeen Years as
a counterweight to the large number of vacuous comedies screened
in China and in the hope that a sorrowful story like this
one, a human tragedy like this, will provoke Chinese people to
think about their real lives and stir their memories of what has
happened in the past.
This is an important aim. Unfortunately Zhang, who is able
to elicit convincing performances from his actors, tends to treat
Tao Lan's past as a combination of personal mistakes and does
little to establish the social and historical context of the events.
This weakens the emotional intensity of the film and gives it
an academic tone.
In fact, the film concludes at the point where Tao Lan and
her parents are only just beginning to reestablish their connections.
One is left wondering how the family will ever be able to form
a loving relationship unless there is some understanding that
the tragic accident and the cruel separation of Tao Lan from her
family for so many years were products of their debilitating poverty
and a harsh legal and judicial system. While Zhang wants his film
to encourage people to reexamine their lives and the past,
how can this begin without an attempt to explore, on a deeper
level, the relationship between personal tragedies and social
circumstances? Zhang's Seventeen Years, in contrast to
his earlier work, seems to halt at the point where some of these
more complex artistic questions arise.
See Also:
2000 Sydney
Film Festival
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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