3 reviews
This film essentially begins during the winter in a region of China just south of the border of North Korea near the Dooman River. As it so happens, this river often ices over when the temperatures plummet and this affords an escape route for North Koreans into China. The problem for these refugees is that there isn't much shelter for them and often they are starving once they get across to safety. Fortunately for some of them, there is a small village comprised of Koreans on the southern side of the river which happens to have a small family comprised of an elderly man (played by "Jin-Long Lin") and two of his grand-children "Chang-Ho" (Jian Cui) and "Soon-Hee" (Lan Yin) who offer them a temporary haven out of the kindness of their hearts. Unfortunately, as the situation in North Korea deteriorates things become much more difficult for everyone involved. Now rather than reveal any more I will just say that this was an interesting film which vividly captured the desperation of those living in this particular area of the world. It does, however, have several slow parts here and there along with a few rather depressing scenes as well. In any case, while this might not be a film everyone can enjoy, it was certainly thought-provoking and for that reason I have rated it accordingly. Slightly above average.
This is my first review ever on this site, so I'm gonna allow myself to give this a 10/10 and highly recommend you to watch it.
I had the great opportunity to watch a screening of this movie with the director, Zhang Lu, present. It was one of those extra credit type of things and I'd been skipping class too often to not jump at a chance like this, so I went in not knowing what this movie was about or what it would be like - though I had a feeling I was going to cry a lot.
And yes, yes I did.
I won't give you a summary of the movie because it held too much information that was not blatantly given out, so my summary will probably be wrong here and there. Instead, I'll tell you how the director started out his career, and hope that he doesn't mind and hope that I don't tell it wrong (because he spoke in Chinese and had a translator say it back in English, so there might be some things lost in translation.)
From the ages 27-37, Zhang Lu felt like he wasted his life. He spent his time at home cooking for his kids, taking care of them, and doing not much else while his wife went out to work and support the family monetarily. One day his director friend comes up to him and asks him to write a screenplay for him, because the stories Zhang Lu had been telling him were interesting. Zhang Lu told him no, but afterwards felt like there was a new purpose to his life and wrote the screenplay anyways. When he met up with his friend later and gave him the screenplay, his friend went to the bathroom and cried for ten minutes. At the time, he thought to himself, "if my screenplay made someone cry for that long, it must not be good." (I cried enough for the entire audience, btw.) But his friend took the screenplay anyways and tried to get it approved by the Chinese government, because it had to be back then. They told Zhang Lu's friend no, so his friend asked him if he could write another one, a "fake" version" to give to the censorship bureau, though he would continue to direct the original one. So Zhang Lu wrote him a second one and his friend got it approved. But afterwards, Zhang Lu found out that his friend was actually shooting the second one and got upset, asking him why he would shoot the fake one and not the real one when he told Zhang Lu he would. His friend told him he'd probably get fired for shooting the original. So Zhang Lu told him, no! He said, what could be so hard about shooting the movie? I could shoot the movie! And so he did.
Boom.
Obviously the movie he shot wasn't Dooman River, and this story maybe has no relation at all to Dooman River. But it's a cool story anyways, and Dooman River is a great movie.
So. Watch it.
Bye.
I had the great opportunity to watch a screening of this movie with the director, Zhang Lu, present. It was one of those extra credit type of things and I'd been skipping class too often to not jump at a chance like this, so I went in not knowing what this movie was about or what it would be like - though I had a feeling I was going to cry a lot.
And yes, yes I did.
I won't give you a summary of the movie because it held too much information that was not blatantly given out, so my summary will probably be wrong here and there. Instead, I'll tell you how the director started out his career, and hope that he doesn't mind and hope that I don't tell it wrong (because he spoke in Chinese and had a translator say it back in English, so there might be some things lost in translation.)
From the ages 27-37, Zhang Lu felt like he wasted his life. He spent his time at home cooking for his kids, taking care of them, and doing not much else while his wife went out to work and support the family monetarily. One day his director friend comes up to him and asks him to write a screenplay for him, because the stories Zhang Lu had been telling him were interesting. Zhang Lu told him no, but afterwards felt like there was a new purpose to his life and wrote the screenplay anyways. When he met up with his friend later and gave him the screenplay, his friend went to the bathroom and cried for ten minutes. At the time, he thought to himself, "if my screenplay made someone cry for that long, it must not be good." (I cried enough for the entire audience, btw.) But his friend took the screenplay anyways and tried to get it approved by the Chinese government, because it had to be back then. They told Zhang Lu's friend no, so his friend asked him if he could write another one, a "fake" version" to give to the censorship bureau, though he would continue to direct the original one. So Zhang Lu wrote him a second one and his friend got it approved. But afterwards, Zhang Lu found out that his friend was actually shooting the second one and got upset, asking him why he would shoot the fake one and not the real one when he told Zhang Lu he would. His friend told him he'd probably get fired for shooting the original. So Zhang Lu told him, no! He said, what could be so hard about shooting the movie? I could shoot the movie! And so he did.
Boom.
Obviously the movie he shot wasn't Dooman River, and this story maybe has no relation at all to Dooman River. But it's a cool story anyways, and Dooman River is a great movie.
So. Watch it.
Bye.
Most movie financiers lust after leaving their fingerprints on the film stripes, manipulating how the story should develop, which actor(s) to take, where to shoot
And this film is just to my amazement, though the project is partly supported by French money, I saw NO accidental French journalist doing secretive investigation in the border village, NOR gone-astray French tourists being Nosey Parker to stay in one of the houses sprouting up. And thus, the original chilly flavour generated from both the weather and the ruling parties, and also the villagers' warm human touch of the northern region is well-kept.
I wild guessed that the fund provider was so open-minded to allow the director, ZHANG Lu, run his imagination and creativity freely. Yet, while asking him this question, I got this answer: French is not his language, he said in humorous tone, and so he might have mis-grabbed the meaning when it was uttered. What enlightening truth: lost in translation, so fortunately.
I wild guessed that the fund provider was so open-minded to allow the director, ZHANG Lu, run his imagination and creativity freely. Yet, while asking him this question, I got this answer: French is not his language, he said in humorous tone, and so he might have mis-grabbed the meaning when it was uttered. What enlightening truth: lost in translation, so fortunately.