A subtle reconstruction of Jia Zhang Ke's artistic signatures, though not a repurposing of them, Mountains May Depart is at once his most direct and most indirect portrait of modern China. A typically penetrating, profound work, Jia again presents his inquiries as thesis; few of his peers are so skilled in the process of utilizing identifiable realities for their subtextual import. We see the world as it truly is - both from a recognizable perspective and from a new, altogether more incisive perspective. If politics shape these realities as we perceive them, Jia exploits reality for political purpose, and always with the smoothest, softest of touches. In Mountains May Depart, reality is ironically foregrounded amid a bold lurch in the direction of melodrama. Finally, a picture of people that puts the people first, though Jia's usual (and ever-welcome) focus on expressive imagery and socio-geographical significance remains a premier apparatus in his ideological efforts. In this, Jia falters - the stories he tells harbour expected heft, both emotionally and metaphorically, and they're performed with marvellous grace and sensitivity by the ensemble cast, but they're often plodding and didactic. This is a most earnest, unaware melodrama, in the service of something admirable, but too rarely admirable in its own right. Only in the end, as all of Jia's political, humanistic, stylistic and narrative concerns come together in a brilliant final scene, does Mountains May Depart reveal its true worth. For all its flaws, this film remains indubitably the product of a master artist's ever-expanding mind.
Showing posts with label Mountains May Depart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mountains May Depart. Show all posts
Wednesday, 20 July 2016
Wednesday, 30 December 2015
CEMETERY OF SPLENDOUR TOPS LA INTERNACIONAL CINEFILA'S FILMS OF 2015 LIST
La Internacional Cinefila has chosen Apichatpong Weerasethakul's Cemetery of Splendour as the best film of the year! The Thai director's final film in his homeland has impressed critics the world over, and this is only the latest in an already long list of honours the film has received. Other international arthouse hits populate the seven-strong list, plus George Miller's Mad Max: Fury Road.
1. Cemetery of Splendour (Apichatpong Weerasethakul)
2. The Assassin (Hou Hsiao Hsien)
3. Arabian Nights: Volume 1 - The Restless One / Arabian Nights: Volume 2 - The Desolate One / Arabian Nights: Volume 3 - The Enchanted One (Miguel Gomes)
= Homeland (Iraq Year Zero) (Abbas Fahdel)
5. Right Now, Wrong Then (Hong Sang Soo)
6. Mad Max: Fury Road (George Miller)
= Mountains May Depart (Jia Zhang Ke)
Wednesday, 23 December 2015
U.S. TRAILER FOR MOUNTAINS MAY DEPART
Aside from a few international territories to date, Jia Zhang Ke's Mountains May Depart is yet to open in most of the world. A lengthy festival schedule through 2014 has seen the film pick up many fans worldwide, even if its initial reaction at the Cannes Film Festival was somewhat mixed. Here's the first U.S. trailer, which gives those of us who haven't yet seen the film an idea of what critics were talking about when they praised Zhao Tao's performance back in May.
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