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Under the Hawthorn Tree

Shan zha shu zhi lian

China

2010

114 Min
Color
2.35:1
Mandarin
  • Currently 3.4/5 Stars.
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DIR Zhang Yimou

PROD Zhang Weiping, Hugo Shong, Cao Huayi, Bill Kong

SCR Ai Mi, Chui Yin Lam, Roman von Aimi, Gu Xiao-bai

DP Zhao Xiaoding

CAST Zhou Dongyu, Shawn Dou, Chen Taisheng, Sa Rina, Li Xuejian, Lü Liping, Sun Haiying, Xi Meijuan

ED Meng Peicong

SOUND Tao Jing

Berlinale (Generation), Melbourne (Next Gen)

Synopsis

The People’s Republic of China during the Cultural Revolution. Jing, a college student from town, is sent to a remote mountain village for ‘reeducation’. Jing is the personification of innocence. But her father has been put behind bars for being a ‘counter-revolutionary’ and so now Jing’s mother must try to support her three children on her own. Jing knows that not only her own future but that of her family now depends on how the authorities judge her efforts to be ‘reeducated’.

Jing’s careful and inconspicuous behaviour comes to an end, however, when she falls in love with Sun, the engaging son of a high ranking officer. Given their completely different backgrounds, their love is not only hopeless, it is also dangerous. But their mutual attraction proves to be stronger than any of these obstacles.

At first Jing resists Sun’s advances, but he refuses to give up, even when she returns to town. Before long, the two young people are passionately – but secretly – in love. Nobody must find out – least of all Jing’s mother, who already fears for her daughter’s future. But then Sun suddenly disappears, and when he reappears, something about him has changed. Jing has to rethink her perception of love, honour and loyalty. And stand up for her real beliefs. –Berlinale

Director

Original

Zhang Yimou

Zhang Yimou is one of the best-known directors of the Chinese Fifth Generation and one of the most influential and widely respected filmmakers working today. Zhang was born in 1950, in the city of Xi’an in Shaanxi Province, to a future in Communist China that seemed unpromising; his father was an officer in Chiang Kai-shek’s Kuomintang Army and one of his brothers was accused of being a spy, while another fled to Taiwan. During the 1950s, his family’s background was suspect and during the convulsive tumult of the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s, it was criminal. Zhang was pulled out of high school and sent to toil with the peasants. Later, he transferred to a textile factory. While working there, Zhang reportedly sold his own blood to buy his first camera.

In 1978, at the age of 27, Zhang passed the entrance exam for the Beijing Film Academy but was rejected on account of his age. After an appeal to the Ministry of Culture, however, he was enrolled in the B.F.A.‘s class of 1982… read more

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rado

17Jul11

Gently devastating Cultural Revolution drama proves Yimou haters wrong (again).

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