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To Live

To Live DVD cover
Directed by Zhang Yimou
Produced by Fu-Sheng Chiu
Funhong Kow
Christophe Tseng
Written by Lu Wei
Novel:
Yu Hua
Starring Ge You
Gong Li
Niu Ben
Guo Tao
Jiang Wu
Music by Zhao Jiping
Cinematography Lü Yue
Editing by Du Yuan
Release date(s) Cannes:
May 18, 1994
United Kingdom:
October 14, 1994
United States:
November 18, 1994
Running time 125 minutes
Country China
Language Mandarin

To Live or Lifetimes (Chinese: pinyin: Huózhe) is a Chinese film directed by Zhang Yimou in 1994, starring Ge You, Gong Li, and produced by the Shanghai Film Studio and ERA International. It is based on the novel of the same name by Yu Hua. Having achieved international success with his previous films (Ju Dou and Raise the Red Lantern), director Zhang Yimou's To Live came with high expectations. It is the first Chinese film that had its foreign distribution rights pre-sold.[1]

The film was banned in Mainland China by the Chinese State Administration of Radio, Film, and Television[2] due to its critical portrayal of various policies and campaigns of the Communist government. Zhang Yimou was also banned from filmmaking for two years.[3]

To Live was screened at the 1994 New York Film Festival before eventually receiving a limited release in the United States on November 18, 1994.[4]

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

The movie is based on Yu Hua's novel "To Live".

The story begins some time in the 1940s. Xu Fugui (Ge You) is a local rich man's son and compulsive gambler, who loses his family property to a man named Long'er. His behaviour also causes his long-suffering wife Jiazhen (Gong Li) to leave him, along with their daughter, Fengxia and their unborn son, Youqing.

After he loses his entire family fortune, Fugui eventually reunites with his wife and children, but is forced to start a shadow puppet troupe with a partner named Chunsheng to support his family. The Chinese Civil War is occurring at the time, and both Fugui and Chunsheng are forcibly enlisted into the Kuomintang during a performance. After a heavy battle, Fugui and Chunsheng are captured by the forces of the Communist Party of China, where they quickly become entertainers for the troops. Eventually Fugui is able to return home and explain his absence, only to find out that Fengxia has become mute and lost most of her hearing due to a fever.

After the CCP's victory, Fugui attends a local public trial where the new communist authority convicts Long'er of sabotaging the revolution. Long'er recognises Fugui, and tries to break free from the executioners, but he is brought back and shot. It turns out that Long'er did not want to donate any of his wealth to the "people's government", and when they tried to pressure him to do so, they only enraged him further so that he decided to burn all of his property instead of giving it away. No one helped to extinguish the fire due to Long'er's bad reputation, and he was designated a reactionary. Fugui realizes the serendipity of losing their fortune to Long'er, for he could have been executed had he not lost it in their bet.

The story moves forward a decade into the future, to the time of the Great Leap Forward. The local town chief enlists Fugui and Jiazhen to donate all scrap iron in their possession to the national drive to produce steel and make weaponry for retaking Taiwan. As an entertainer, Fugui performs for the entire town, which has been devoted entirely to producing steel. Later, everyone appears frantic, and it transpires that the district chief smashed his jeep into a wall that collapsed - with Youqing on the other side. He is killed instantly. The district chief later transpires to be Chunsheng. At the gravesite of the boy, his mother leaves for him a lunchbox of 20 stale dumplings, which were intended as his lunch for school that day, plus 20 newly made dumplings. Chunsheng arrives at the grave, but his attempts to apologize and compensate the family are rebuffed, with Jiazhen declaring that he owed them a life.

The story moves forward again another decade, to the Cultural Revolution. The village chief advises Fugui's family to burn their shadow puppet drama props, which have been deemed as counter-revolutionary as they are traditional cultural elements. Fengxia is now grown up. Her family arranges for her to meet Wan Erxi, a local leader of the Red Guards who also has a disability. They fall in love and marry.

It is then revealed that Chunsheng, the district chief, has been branded a reactionary. He arrives late at night to inform Fugui and Jiazhen that his wife has committed suicide and he plans to do so also. Chunsheng wanted to give all of his money to Fugui's family as a form of his final apology and wished that they accept the money before his death. Jiazhen, who up to that point refused to talk to Chunsheng, tells him to keep living, because "you still owe us a life!"

During Fengxia's childbirth, her parents and husband accompany her to the county hospital, where they find out that students are in charge as all doctors have been sent to do hard labor for being "reactionary academic authorities". The nurses tell the family that both the child and mother will be fine, but the family is skeptical, and manages to retrieve a doctor from confinement to oversee the birth. As the doctor has not eaten for several days, Fugui purchases seven steamed buns (mantou) for him and the family decides to name the son Mantou, after the buns. However, Fengxia begins to hemorrhage, and the nurses panic, admitting that they do not know what to do. The family and nurses seek the advice of the doctor, but find that he has overeaten and is semiconscious. The family is helpless, and Fengxia dies from hypovolemia. The point is made that the doctor ate 7 buns, but that by drinking too much water at the same time, each bun expanded to the size of 7 buns: therefore Fengxia's death is a result of the doctor's having the equivalent of 49 buns in his belly. (1949 was the year that the Chinese Communist Party cemented its hold on modern China.)

The movie ends six years later, with the family now consisting of Fugui, Jiazhen, their son-in-law Erxi, and grandson Mantou. The family visits the graves of Youqing and Fengxia, where Jiazhen, as per tradition, leaves dumplings for her son. Erxi buys a box full of young chicks for his son, which they decide to keep in the chest formerly used for the shadow puppet props. When Mantou inquires how long it will take for the chicks to grow up, Fugui's response is a more tempered version of something he said earlier in the film, which shows that he no longer possesses the blind faith in communism he once had. However, in spite of all of his personal hardships, he expresses optimism for his grandson's future, and the film ends with his statement, "and life will get better and better" as the whole family sits down to eat.

[edit] Awards and nominations

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Klapwald, Thea (1994-04-27). "On the Set with Zhang Yimou". The International Herald Tribune. http://www.iht.com/articles/1994/04/27/zhang.php. Retrieved 2007-05-10. 
  2. ^ Zhang Yimou. Frances K. Gateward, Yimou Zhang, Univ. Press of Mississippi, 2001, pp. 63-4.
  3. ^ To Live - BY ROGER EBERT
  4. ^ James, Caryn (1994-11-18). "FILM REVIEW; Zhang Yimou's 'To Live'". The New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9501E6DC1031F93BA25752C1A962958260. Retrieved 2008-05-20. 
  5. ^ "Festival de Cannes: To Live". festival-cannes.com. http://www.festival-cannes.com/en/archives/ficheFilm/id/2967/year/1994.html. Retrieved 2009-08-27. 

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

Awards
Preceded by
Farewell My Concubine
BAFTA Award for Best Film Not in the English Language
1994
Succeeded by
Il Postino
Preceded by
Faraway, So Close!
Grand Prix du Jury, Cannes
1994
tied with Burnt by the Sun
Succeeded by
Ulysses' Gaze
(award renamed Grand Prix)



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