Where the Wild Things Are (2009)
80%I saw Where the Wild Things Are twice, two nights in a row. My hopes for this film were not that high, I'm not a life-long fan of the children's book and was expecting... More
I saw Where the Wild Things Are twice, two nights in a row. My hopes for this film were not that high, I'm not a life-long fan of the children's book and was expecting... More
"This movie is for the fans- This is it", This is the business that is "show".The movie opens with scrolling text which tells us this footage was shot in April of... More
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Balzac and the Little Chinese Seamstress (2005)
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Posted on 2/27/09 at 4:05 PM Set in 1971 communist China is the tale of two young men sent to live in the mountains to be "re-educated" as peasants in the Chairman Mao method. One is the son of a dentist, the other is a violinist, and both are considered "reactionists" because of their apparent intellectualism. The mountain villagers are painted as savages, with no knowledge of technology or high art (they think the violin is some sort of toy which they pass around and bang on like chimps) and a serious distrust of anything foreign. The two young men are quickly forced into menial labor, hauling buckets of human waste to be used as fertilizer and hauling rocks out of the tiny mine shaft. One day, the community tailor comes to the village, along with his teenage granddaughter, and both boys quickly fall in love with her. She's not like the other peasants, she has a curious mind that doesn't necessarily fall in line with Mao's ideals. She steals the boys' alarm clock and takes it apart to see how the animal on the face worked. She builds models of the airplanes she sees fly overhead. The boys decide to teach her to read, and they find a stash of banned books one of the other re-trainees has smuggled into the village. "Xiao Cai Feng" is fairly subtle in it's demonstration of the evils of ignorance in a totalitarian society, unfortunately the same subtlety isn't applied to the love triangle element of the story. However, it is a beautiful and compelling (well, most of the time it's compelling) movie nonetheless.
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