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Still Life (2006)
Director: Jia Zhangke
Movie review
From Time Out London
Ironies abound in the latest by China’s greatest contemporary cinematic chronicler Jia Zhangke: There’s politics in every one of cinematographer Yu Likwai’s superbly composed HD frames, but it’s feel that the former is after. And in the half-drowned town of Fengjie – the victim of the Yangtze river Three Gorges Project and capitalism as well as being the new home of rural Shanxi construction worker Han (Han Sanming) – the feeling isn’t good.
Han is looking for his estranged wife and daughter; while, in another part of town, as if to show missed-connections are no male preserve, nurse Hong (Zhao Tao) is looking for an absentee husband. Meanwhile, the Yangtze flows on; they both end up gazing out to it, in search of answers to questions wider than the immediate.
Arguably, ‘Still Life’ marks a change for Jia, with a sharpening focus reflecting the translation of his observational eye from the particular modes, dilemmas and adaptations pertaining to his home province of Shanxi to the even faster-changing realities of the more industrialised Chinese heartland. But here – from the opening pan around the rolling community of the ‘immigrants’’ boat through the film’s mini-odyssey among the lived-in spaces taking occupancy during the hastening phases of deconstruction and erection – what is unchanged is Jia’s unique ability to let us participate in people’s experience.
In ‘Still Life’ the director’s assurance is such that the barriers between documentary and fictional film are made to seem an irrelevance; you may find his film’s intimations of commonality – what we share as human beings – will surprise and move you in unexpected ways.
Author: Wally Hammond
Time Out London Issue 1954: Jan 30 to Feb 5
User reviews of this film
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- KK said...
- Posted on Nov 21 2009 03:07 Wow, what a bad movie. This movie is seriously depressing: exactly the kind of "Emperor's New Clothes" flick that arthouse crowds love to laud. The non-professional performances are uniformly artificial - imagine waiting 5 seconds before responding to every speech. Yes, the crumbling city makes for some sort of commentary on the Three Gorges project, but does this have to be so deathly slow? The narrative is non-existent - the story is so tenuous that it practically amounts to nothing. Tony Haynes and other critics will have a field day projecting all sorts of readings into it, but this film is one of the worst Chinese films I've ever seen (this coming from an ethnic Chinese who watches mainly HK and Chinese flicks).
- Report as inappropriate
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- Oli said...
- Posted on Feb 25 2008 08:33 Fascinating, thoughtful, beautiful film.
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- Krroz said...
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Posted on Feb 20 2008 10:24
Dauntingly beautiful film.
Amazingly complex and powerful.
I am alam already looking forward to watching the DVD again and discover some subtleties I missed this time.
Brilliant!! - Report as inappropriate
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- cathrin said...
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Posted on Feb 02 2008 19:25
the worst movie i have seen in my whole life
- cathrin, 58 - Report as inappropriate
Cast & crew
Director: Jia Zhangke
Cast: Han Sanming, Zhao Tao, Ma Lizhen full cast
Duration: 108 mins
US Release: Nov 16 2006
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