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Caught by the Tides

Original title: Feng liu yi dai
  • 2024
  • 1h 51m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.8K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,987
2,737
Caught by the Tides (2024)
A Chinese woman lives for herself in silence, celebrating the prosperous Belle Epoque with songs and dance.
Play trailer1:40
1 Video
17 Photos
Drama

A Chinese woman lives for herself in silence, celebrating the prosperous Belle Epoque with songs and dance.A Chinese woman lives for herself in silence, celebrating the prosperous Belle Epoque with songs and dance.A Chinese woman lives for herself in silence, celebrating the prosperous Belle Epoque with songs and dance.

  • Director
    • Jia Zhang-ke
  • Writers
    • Jiahuan Wan
    • Jia Zhang-ke
  • Stars
    • Tao Zhao
    • Zhubin Li
    • You Zhou
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    1.8K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,987
    2,737
    • Director
      • Jia Zhang-ke
    • Writers
      • Jiahuan Wan
      • Jia Zhang-ke
    • Stars
      • Tao Zhao
      • Zhubin Li
      • You Zhou
    • 11User reviews
    • 72Critic reviews
    • 87Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 7 wins & 15 nominations total

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:40
    Official Trailer

    Photos17

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    Top cast7

    Edit
    Tao Zhao
    Tao Zhao
    • Qiaoqiao
    Zhubin Li
    • Guo Bin
    You Zhou
    Changchu Xu
      Jianlin Pan
      Zhou Lan
      Maotao Hu
      • Director
        • Jia Zhang-ke
      • Writers
        • Jiahuan Wan
        • Jia Zhang-ke
      • All cast & crew
      • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

      User reviews11

      6.71.8K
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      Featured reviews

      8alexanderlavin

      Portrait of a Nation

      This one is the real deal; our esteemed director (all of his projects are foremost "director's films") is one of the greats whom you can discuss in the same breath as Vigo and Varda without puffery.

      Jia has a tremendous feel for the Chinese people and is able to capture the textures and rhythms of life there like few others I know. It's this humanity and curiosity, combined with incisive wit and subtle indictment of hypocrisy, that allow him to sidestep censorship of politicized content.

      This movie could have been a slight and indulgent scrapbook, but the cast and creative teams--working over an extended schedule to make 'Boyhood' blush--keep the whole thing pitch perfect. Like that earlier milestone film, it's a movie almost without any big moments... and yet there is a vast catharsis that fills in during its latter half.

      By the time it gets to the last shot, which I now count among my favorite final shots in cinema history, it achieves a sweeping and yet deeply personal sense of determination in the face of the unknown future we all face. I recommend you see it with a lot of people at a cinema.
      6politic1983

      Tongue in Cheek

      Have you ever bought an album by a band and find that, rather than new material, it's some old B-sides, remixes and a couple of new songs for added value? Of course you have, if you're over thirty-five, that is. Jia Zhang-ke's "Caught by the Tides" is in many ways just that. But in doing so, it does make a statement about his career, and indeed the changing face of the world around him.

      Qiao Qiao (Zhao Tao) shares a romance with Guao Bin (Zhubin Li), but he moves on, with Qiao Qiao trailing in his wake. Over the years, and across the country, she follows him. But on reaching her destination, maybe what she's been wanting isn't for her.

      But in reality, the plot is irrelevant, as much of this has already been written and filmed over the years; it has now just been repurposed. Outtakes from the likes of "Unknown Pleasures" (2002), "Still Life" (2006) and "Mountains May Depart" (2015), if I remember correctly. This allows to realistically show the two leads over time, and their unequal ageing. Scenes are, therefore, different, but very familiar, in what serves as something of a retrospective for Jia's work, in a more direct and better-executed way than Takeshi Kitano attempted with "Takeshis'" (2005).

      The problem with creating a film in this way is that while it's perfectly serviceable as a narrative film, shoehorning in what you already have makes this feel a little awkward in terms of flow. It feels more a series of vignettes than a well-constructed work. Having seen many of the films the outtakes are from serves to remind you of the original scenario, and so doesn't quite feel like a single story, but various stories stuck together.

      But there are some nice coincidences that materialise and allow Jia's message to come across. Text messaging on an old Nokia become TikTok videos on the latest smart phone. Jia is very tongue-in-cheek with his look at technology. TikTok stardom serves more for cheap advertising than actual fame and fortune; and service robots can be easily confused with simple questioning. Technology has played an interesting role in shaping the nature of human relationships, especially over the past twenty years.

      Knowing Jia's work, you will instantly recognise what is going on here. But if coming to his work fresh, this may seem like a slightly strange film that doesn't quite tie together nicely enough. Some scenes don't seem to really fit; more added in as they were available.

      So, this may require some background work for the uninitiated, and is one more for long-term fans. Though they might feel they are watching "Still Life" again. Has life moved on in the past eighteen years?

      Politic1983.home.blog.
      10lk-31311

      One of the best Jia Zhangje's movies

      One of Jia Zhangke's best movies. The best of his works are mainly those documentary-like films with deep reflections on modern China and its ordinary, often invisible people caught in the tide of the country's transformation over the past four decades. I spent over 30 years in China, from 1980s to early 2010s. You may not find dramatic plots in this movie, but many of the scenes reflect what I experienced and witnessed there. This movie feels like a collage, bringing back memories of my life over the past three decades.

      Most of the scenes feel both real and surreal from today's perspective-especially when you think about how fast and dramatically Chinese society has evolved, along with how people's lifestyles and mindsets have shifted with the tides of time.
      8Blue-Grotto

      If you love until it hurts, there is no more hurt, and only love remains.

      A meditation on love and passing time; a woman searches for her lost lover within the rubble of a deconstructed city as well as her own shattered memory, the Three Gorges Dam consumes cities whole just as time swallows people, women sing and dance in joy and hurt, and dreams surface and submerge again. Lives are changing, and we often don't notice.

      Utilizing primarily b-roll and outtakes from previous films, Zhang-ke weaves a cerebral and imaginative tale. While I wish the material was all new and put together with more of a cohesive story in mind, I can't deny that Zhang-ke has a magical and mesmerizing touch in all that he does, even in his wandering. Seen at the Toronto International Film Festival.
      5stanl-2

      hot and cold

      The photography was superbe, grandiose or intimate, always striking. OTOH, I (and my date) was unable to follow the story at all. Perhp[as if I knew more about Chinese geography and social customs it would have made more sense, but as it was it left me with nothing more than a huge dark question mark covering over any thought I might have had about the film, a physical rejection of the sound level of ports of it, but also with a trove of images - both nature, man-made, and of haunting faces that will not soon fade away. The one thing that provided some unity came to me afterward when I thought about the title and realized that the movement of the film is analogous to the tide -- washing out to sea bringing all kinds of things from elegant boats to detritus with it, then flowing back upstream.

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      Storyline

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      Did you know

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      • Trivia
        Jia Zhang-ke incorporated footage and outtakes from previous films he had directed into this one, including Unknown Pleasures (2002), Still Life (2006), and Ash Is Purest White (2018). About 10 scenes from this film had previously appeared in the aforementioned movies.

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      Details

      Edit
      • Release date
        • November 22, 2024 (China)
      • Countries of origin
        • China
        • France
        • Japan
      • Languages
        • Mandarin
        • English
      • Also known as
        • We Shall Be All
      • Production companies
        • Huanxi Media Group
        • MK2 Films
        • Momo Pictures
      • See more company credits at IMDbPro

      Box office

      Edit
      • Gross US & Canada
        • $290,627
      • Opening weekend US & Canada
        • $32,093
        • May 11, 2025
      • Gross worldwide
        • $322,170
      See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

      Tech specs

      Edit
      • Runtime
        • 1h 51m(111 min)
      • Color
        • Color
      • Sound mix
        • Dolby Digital
        • Dolby Atmos
      • Aspect ratio
        • 1.85 : 1

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