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Xiao Shan Going Home

Xiaoshan Huijia

China

1995

59 Min
Color
Mandarin
  • Currently 3.7/5 Stars.
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DIR Jia Zhangke

SCR Jia Zhangke

DP Hu Xin

CAST Wang Hongwei, Yao Sheng, Dong Shuzhe, Zhou Xiaomin, Zhu Liqin

ED Jia Zhangke

Synopsis

Xiao Shan, played by Jia’s film school classmate, Wang Hongwei, is an unemployed cook living in Beijing. The film follows him as he plans to return to his rural hometown for the Chinese New Year festival: he accompanies a fellow home-towner to shop for gifts to bring with them and asks a friend for help in buying train tickets. These seemingly innocuous episodes are rife with unexpected obstacles, leading Xiao Shan to encounter frustration and even violence. It also embodies the experience endured every year by hundreds of millions of Chinese who, like Xiao Shan, have migrated from the countryside to seek better living and working situations. —senses of cinema

Director

Original

Jia Zhangke

Early Work

While a student at the Beijing Film Academy, Jia would make three short films to hone his skills. The first, a ten minute short documentary on tourists in Tiananmen Square entitled One Day in Beijing, was made in 1994 on self-raised funds. Though Jia has referred to his first directorial effort as inconsequential and “naive”, he also described the short day and half shoot as “excitement…difficult to express in words.” But it was Jia’s second directorial effort, the short film Xiao Shan Going Home (1995), that would bring him to the attention of the film world. It was a film that helped establish Jia’s style and thematic interests and, in Jia’s words, was a film that “truly marks the beginning of my career as a filmmaker.” Xiao Shan would eventually to screen abroad where it won a top prize at the 1997 Hong Kong Independent Short Film & Video Awards. More significantly, the film’s success brought Jia in contact with cinematographer Yu Lik-wai and… read more

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