He bian de cuo wu
- 2023
- 1 घं 41 मि
IMDb रेटिंग
6.6/10
3.8 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंA chief of police investigates a series of murders in a riverside town in rural China in the 1990s. An arrest is made quickly; clues push the policeman to dive deeper into the hidden behavio... सभी पढ़ेंA chief of police investigates a series of murders in a riverside town in rural China in the 1990s. An arrest is made quickly; clues push the policeman to dive deeper into the hidden behaviour of the locals.A chief of police investigates a series of murders in a riverside town in rural China in the 1990s. An arrest is made quickly; clues push the policeman to dive deeper into the hidden behaviour of the locals.
- पुरस्कार
- 14 जीत और कुल 22 नामांकन
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Reviews from the premiere was exciting so glad I got the replay ticket on 22 May at the Cannes festival. No spoilers.
Actor Zhu Yilong was fantastic in portraiting the character Ma Zhe and gave some very powerful and mesmerizing scenes. One can feel the emotional turmoil of Ma Zhe as the storyline unfold. An amazing young and gifted actor. I look forward in checking out his other movies.
The cinematography was fabulous. Many great scenes composition and the final grading set a good tone on the mood.
The bgm blended well and compliment the movie story development.
Only the River Flows is a well made movie taking a deep dive into human nature and self reflection.
Actor Zhu Yilong was fantastic in portraiting the character Ma Zhe and gave some very powerful and mesmerizing scenes. One can feel the emotional turmoil of Ma Zhe as the storyline unfold. An amazing young and gifted actor. I look forward in checking out his other movies.
The cinematography was fabulous. Many great scenes composition and the final grading set a good tone on the mood.
The bgm blended well and compliment the movie story development.
Only the River Flows is a well made movie taking a deep dive into human nature and self reflection.
A well made drama with great atmosphere, in which the investigation of one murder leads to more innocent deaths. It's at its strongest early on and when we start finding out the police detective may not have a firm grip on reality. Aside from the hallucination sequences, for example, he seems to think he's received an award in the past when no one else remembers it, and despite flushing pieces of his wife's jigsaw puzzle down the toilet during an argument, later she's assembled the whole thing. It really makes you wonder whether he's losing his mind, and between that and other plot elements that don't quite add up, there is ample room to interpret the film as you wish (which I confess felt like a slight negative here).
The characters we meet during the investigation include a docile but mentally challenged man referred to by the locals as "the madman," a pair of star-crossed lovers, and a hairdresser whose secret cross-dressing is one of the few things in the film that you can see coming a mile away. The cop's pregnant wife who asserts her right to choose the infant's fate in no uncertain terms when told it has a 10% chance of being mentally defective is also a rare moment we feel on solid ground in the film, and it was a fantastic scene besides.
The cop's ping-pong loving superior officer urges him to consider the case closed, though a dream sequence in the theater seems to point out just how absurd it is to think "the madman" is behind it all - but then what about the murder of the child with an eyewitness? And why would the hairdresser commit suicide, after surviving a first attempt and being in great spirits literally moments before? Could the cop himself be somehow involved, suffering from some mental defect that he's going to pass on to his infant son? Or could the river itself harbor some form of malevolent spirt, driving people to violence, despair, or insanity?
There are lots of questions here, but just like with the jigsaw puzzle, director Wei Shujun seems to have thrown away a few pieces, leaving us to decide for ourselves. The fact that the cop gets the award he seemed to be deluded about makes really made me wonder how much of this is distorted, or in his mind. That look in the baby's eye was certainly ominous, and maybe an indication that there's some larger, unknowable evil afoot. I just wish this had been a smidge more coherent.
The characters we meet during the investigation include a docile but mentally challenged man referred to by the locals as "the madman," a pair of star-crossed lovers, and a hairdresser whose secret cross-dressing is one of the few things in the film that you can see coming a mile away. The cop's pregnant wife who asserts her right to choose the infant's fate in no uncertain terms when told it has a 10% chance of being mentally defective is also a rare moment we feel on solid ground in the film, and it was a fantastic scene besides.
The cop's ping-pong loving superior officer urges him to consider the case closed, though a dream sequence in the theater seems to point out just how absurd it is to think "the madman" is behind it all - but then what about the murder of the child with an eyewitness? And why would the hairdresser commit suicide, after surviving a first attempt and being in great spirits literally moments before? Could the cop himself be somehow involved, suffering from some mental defect that he's going to pass on to his infant son? Or could the river itself harbor some form of malevolent spirt, driving people to violence, despair, or insanity?
There are lots of questions here, but just like with the jigsaw puzzle, director Wei Shujun seems to have thrown away a few pieces, leaving us to decide for ourselves. The fact that the cop gets the award he seemed to be deluded about makes really made me wonder how much of this is distorted, or in his mind. That look in the baby's eye was certainly ominous, and maybe an indication that there's some larger, unknowable evil afoot. I just wish this had been a smidge more coherent.
"Ma Zhe" (Zhu Yilong) engenders an almost adulatory degree of support from his team as he leads them on an investigation following the discovery of the body of the goose-rearing "Granny Four" on a remote riverside. Suspicion quickly falls on her adopted friend known simply as the "madman", but the detective is not so convinced that things are that straightforward. His ensuing task isn't helped by pressure from his ping-pong playing boss to conclude quickly and by the fact that he and his wife are expecting a baby - and that procedure is not going to be as simple as they might like. With the rain pretty much relentless throughout, he encounters some quirky local characters who seem to muddy the waters rather than offer him clarity. Clarity? Well that's an element to this story that is a bit too sparing at times. "Ma Zhe" finds his troubles gradually getting the better of him - yes, there are more bodies - and soon his own grasp on reality becomes distinctly compromised. Can he keep it together long enough to solve the crime? The film starts with the usual affirmation of the communist values of team play before entering the realms of predictable cop drama tempered with a bit of undercooked psycho-babble that Zhu Yilong tries to hard hold together. By the denouement, though, I felt way too much of the plot was contrived to try to tap into the psyche - of him and us - and it didn't really work. That said, he does well here and we do get quite a tense sense of his gradually becoming overwhelmed by the scenarios that test his usually linear style of working, thinking and living. Sadly, aside from "Ma Zhe", the characters are barely developed and director Wei Shujun seems more interested in focussing on an admittedly gritty and authentic looking peek at 1990s rural China, whilst rather abandoning the detail and characterisation of story to the sidelines as the dream sequences blur more and more the line between reality and fantasy. It does move along well enough, but I found it a bit of a meringue of a film - not much when you get into it.
Director Wei Shujun is one of the most anticipated Chinese directors at Cannes every year, because he really never disappoints. From his witty and humorous film "Striding into the Wind" which was shortlisted for the Director's Fortnight two years ago and received rave reviews at Cannes, this time he brought a different style of black film to the "A Certain Regard" section, which was like a shot in the arm, awakening the tired international critics. The film successfully adapted the work of teacher Yu Hua and had a strong Wei-style personal style, highly restoring the sense of the 90s in China, with a bleak realistic theme supplemented by magical dream segments, and sudden absurd scenes that even made the audience scream in surprise. Some of the ending segments seemed like clues deliberately left by the director, like the godly drama "The Long Season", which made me want to watch it again after seeing it. Ting shuo kan guo cai neng ping fen wo mei kan guo shi yi shi.
10oj-37510
The movie is actually based on a novel by Yu Hua... The plots and setting of this movie makes audience unable to predict the end... The absurdity will make looking forward to the end of the movie...
It's a noir movie... Mind blowing and realism... I believe it took years before Wei Shujun could adapt this to a movie... My friend that attended the screening at Cannes told me how absurd it was and I should see it so... Seeing this, it is above my expectations because I actually don't really like Chinese movies, I base on Korean but seeing this, I look forward to see more of this nature of movies.. Nice Performance from Yilong Zhu and Maoyan Chloe.. it's actually worth given it a try👍
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाOnly the River Flows is based on Yu Hua's story Mistakes by the River. Director Yimou Zhang initially wanted to make a suspense film based on this story, back in the 1990s. Per Yu Hua, they wrote for many days but didn't know how to film it. Yu Hua gave Yimou Zhang another story, To Live, instead, which was made into same named movie Huo zhe (1994) , and subsequently won the Grand Prize of the Jury of Cannes Film Festival in 1994.
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
- How long is Only the River Flows?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
विवरण
बॉक्स ऑफ़िस
- बजट
- CN¥5,00,00,000(अनुमानित)
- दुनिया भर में सकल
- $6,25,578
- चलने की अवधि1 घंटा 41 मिनट
- रंग
- ध्वनि मिश्रण
- पक्ष अनुपात
- 1.85 : 1
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