Nostalgic December: In the Mood for Wong Kar-wai’s Melodrama and Feng Xiaogang’s ‘Youth’?


(CFI) ‘Brotherhood of Blades 2’ 绣春刀II修罗战场 (Dir. Lu Yang, China, 2017, 120min)

Opens on 12/01 at AMC Empire 25

In the Ming dynasty of China, Shen Lian (starring Chang Chen), a secret police of corrupt government, is trapped by the conspiracy on a mission. To prove the innocence, he seeks the truth with a girl called Bei Zhai (Yang Mi). The film won the Award for Best Action Choreography at the 54th Golden Horse Awards.

Youth’ 芳华 (Dir. Feng Xiaogang, China, 2017, 136min)

Opens on 12/15 at AMC Empire 25

A look at the lives of members in a Chinese Military Cultural Troupe in the 1970s; from escaping a family scandal to dealing with unrequited love, each experiences rejection that shapes their lives in this coming-of-age tale selected to play at the Toronto International Film Festival. Adapted from Yan Geling‘s novel of the same name and directed by Chinese helming legend Feng Xiaogang.

Bleeding Steel机器之血 (Dir. Zhang Lijia, China/Hong Kong, 2017)

Opens on 12/22 at AMC Empire 25

Jackie Chan stars as a hardened special forces agent who fights to protect a young woman from a sinister criminal gang. At the same time, he with feels a special connection to the young woman, like they met in a different life.

Explosion引爆者 (Dir. Chang Zheng, 100 min, China, 2017)

Through 12/05 at AMC Empire 25

Starring Duan Yihong (Best Actor, 2017 Tokyo International Film Festival), ‘Explosion’ tells the story of a blast technician who survives an explosion in a mining town only to discover it may not have been an accident. While investigating the truth, he becomes the prime suspect and must use his unique skillset to clear his name.

‘We the Workers‘ (Dir. Huang Wenhai, 173 min, China, 2017)

12/02 at NYU, 721 Broadway, 6th Floor

Currently based in Hong Kong, veteran indie filmmaker Huang Wenhai and human rights activist, feminist scholar, blogger and filmmaker Zeng Jinyan, joined hands in making We the Workers, which premiered in New York as a part of the Guggenheim’s ongoing  “Turn it on: China on Film” documentary series. The event is free and open to the public. Light refreshments will be served.

‘Oxhide‘ 牛皮 (Dir. Liu Jiayin, 105min, China, 2005)

12/06 at Francesca Beale Theater

In Liu Jiayin’s first film, over the course of 23 carefully choreographed shots, we watch the young filmmaker, her parents, and their cat act out a thinly fictionalized version of the life they share in a cramped Beijing apartment, where her father makes leather handbags.

‘A Brighter Summer Day’ 牯岭街少年杀人事件 (Dir. Edward Yang, 237 min, Taiwan, 1991)

12/09 at Walter Reade Theater

A deeply personal epic comparable in scope and impact to the Godfather movies and Sergio Leone’s Once Upon a Time in America, Yang’s extraordinary memory film stretches tautly over four hours of screen time and more than 100 speaking parts. Few movies more readily call to mind the great, sprawling novels of the 19th century and their portraits of ordinary individuals caught in the maelstrom of a changing society.

12/08 at Metrograph

The sort-of sequel to Wong’s Days of Being Wild and In the Mood for Love centers on Tony Leung Chiu-wai’s science-fiction writer Chow, chronicling his aimless affairs with women (including Faye Wong, Zhang Ziyi, and Gong Li) after Mrs. Chen has disappeared from his life, the narrative shuttling between Hong Kong in the early ‘60s and the dystopian, heartsick future of Chow’s imagination, just past the end of the “One Country, Two Systems” period. ‘

This series pays tribute to the genre that boldly endeavored to put emotion on screen in its purest form, featuring classics from the silent era and Hollywood’s Golden Age to major mid-century films from around the world to modern dramas and subversive postmodern incarnations. Bring tissues.


‘Rouge’ 胭脂扣 (Dir. Stanley Kwan, 1987, Hong Kong, 93min)

12/16 at Walter Reade Theater

In the tradition of Douglas Sirk and Vincente Minnelli, Hong Kong auteur Stanley Kwan creates expressively stylized emotion spectacles etched in sumptuous mise-en-scène. In this entrancingly strange and sensual ghost story, 1930s courtesan Fleur (HK icon Anita Mui) dies of an opium overdose in a suicide pact with her forbidden lover (Leslie Cheung). She goes to hell, but he doesn’t join her there as expected. Fifty years later she returns to Earth in search of him…

‘In the Mood for Love’ 花样年华 (Dir. Wong Kar-Wai, 2000, Hong Kong/China, 98min)

12/16 at Walter Reade Theater

Wong Kar Wai’s swoon-inducing instant classic made Maggie Cheung and Tony Leung the star-crossed dream team of the early 2000s art house. They play next-door neighbors driven by loneliness into a platonic romance amid the alleyways and noodle shops of 1960s Hong Kong, only to discover that their own spouses are carrying on an affair. Preceded by: ‘In Love for the Mood’ (Dir. Ming Wong,2009, Singapore, 5min).

‘The Goddess’ 神女 (Dir. Wu Yonggang, China, 1934, 73min)

12/21 at Walter Reade Theater

In her greatest role, Chinese silent-cinema icon Ruan Lingyu (阮玲玉) plays a prostitute who sacrifices everything to give her young son a better life, but finds herself beaten down by society at every turn. Her suicide one year after the film’s release at the age of 24 would deprive the world of one of its greatest silent actresses, but her magnetic, astonishingly naturalistic presence—recalling the modernity of Louise Brooks crossed with the grit of Barbara Stanwyck—is here forever immortalized. Digital restoration courtesy of the China Film Archive. The screening will be accompanied by a live piano performance by Donald Sosin.

‘Spring in a Small Town’ 小城之春 (Dir. Fei Mu, 1948, China, 98m)

12/27 at Walter Reade Theater

The oft-cited crowning achievement of classic Chinese cinema is a mesmerizing portrait of female desire and subjectivity that ranks alongside Brief Encounter and the works of Mikio Naruse. Married to a depressed, chronically ill man, housewife Yuwen (Wei Wei) is quietly suffocating in a provincial village when an old flame unexpectedly walks back into her life. So begins a wrenching internal struggle between marital fidelity and erotic yearning that plays out with supreme restraint on screen, but which boils over in its heroine’s impassioned voiceovers. Digital restoration courtesy of the China Film Archive.

Through 01/04, 2018 at The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum

Watch Ai Weiwei introducing the series

December lineup:

‘In Search of Lin Zhao’s Soul,’ ‘Storm under the Sun,’ ‘Falling from the Sky,’ ‘Plastic China,’ ‘Petition,’ ‘Jiabiangou Elegy: Life and Death of the Rightists,’ ‘The Road,’ ‘Silver City,’ ‘Dream Walking,’ and ‘Disturbing the Peace.’

Source: China Film Insider

Subscribe to receive free email updates: