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Zhang Jingwen Movies

2004  
 
 
2002  
 
Seven internationally respected filmmakers offer different perspectives on time and fate -- some witty, some somber -- in this omnibus film, with the stories linked by performances from jazz great Hugh Masekela. Dogs Have No Hell by Aki Kaurismaki follows one man's unusual journey as he celebrates getting out of jail by travelling to Siberia in search of a wife. Victor Erice directed the impressionistic Lifeline, in which a family of Spanish farmers try to help an infant who has fallen ill. Werner Herzog visits the Uru Eus tribe of South America -- believed to have been the last unknown indigenous people on earth prior to their discover in 1981 -- and explores the often sad toll their discovery has taken upon them in Ten Thousand Years Older. Chloe Sevigny plays an film actress waiting out a ten-minute break in her trailer in Int. Trailer. Night, directed by Jim Jarmusch. Wim Wedners contributes Twelve Miles to Trona, in which a young man, dazed and ill, tries to drive himself to a doctor through a barren desert. Spike Lee looks into the Florida vote-counting scandal, and how Al Gore's assistants and supporters reacted to it, in the short documentary We Wuz Robbed. And in 100 Flowers Hidden Deep, directed by Chen Kaige, a delusional elderly man is convinced his furniture still stands in the vacant lot where his home used to be, and he persuades workers to help him move it away to safety. ~ Mark Deming, Rovi

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Starring:
Markku PeltolaKati Outinen, (more)
 
1986  
 
This melodrama focuses on the misfortunes of a talented musician whose curse is to have lived in the wrong time period. He's a virtuoso of the zheng, a classical musical instrument that Mao Zedong's Red Guard finds offensive and retrograde, and so the musician is considered to be feudal and a threat to the new China. His instrument is prohibited, and under these trying circumstances his wife leaves him. Later on, his son is imprisoned in a labor camp. The son hopes to get to Hong Kong and freedom once he is released, and even sells the zheng to raise money, but to no avail - he is cheated and never makes it out. Even after the musician dies, the perfidy continues in this film that lambastes the Red Guards and Western consumerism alike. ~ Eleanor Mannikka, Rovi

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Starring:
Kung ZianzhuChen Rui, (more)