Chinese master Jia Zhang-ke makes a bold play for greater accessibility and up-to-the-minutesocial relevance with his brilliant new film, a Cannes Film Festival prizewinner (for bestscreenplay) this year.
The film is made up of four interconnected stories. Jiang Wu plays Dahai, a coalminer inShanxi who discovers his corrupt village chief is in cahoots with a rich mining mogul toswindle the villagers’ money. Chinese comedy star Wang Baoqiang visits his home villagenear Chongqing to care for his family. Jia’s regular muse (and wife) Zhao Tao plays amartial-arts heroine, a switchblade-wielding receptionist whom local goons unfortunatelymistake for a prostitute. Finally, Luo Lanshan and Li Meng are a worker and prostitute in theindustrialized south, seeking romance.
Jia has never made anything quite like this, with its references to classic and modern HongKong action cinema and its dark vision of a violent society pushed over the edge intofrightening bloodshed. Jia sacrifices none of his formal control or his artfulness, though, inthis thrillingly shot drama of China today, ripped fresh from the headlines.
Shelly Kraicer
Vancouver International Film Festival
‘a stunning slap in the face’
The Guardian
Winner, Best Screenplay, Cannes Film Festival
Winner, Best Foreign Feature Film, Denver Starz Film Festival
Winner, Best Narrative Film, Abu Dhabi Film Festival