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The World

Original title: Shijie
  • 2004
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 23m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
3.7K
YOUR RATING
The World (2004)
The World Scene: Our Own Twin Towers
Play clip1:09
Watch The World Scene: Our Own Twin Towers
4 Videos
12 Photos
Drama

An exploration on the impact of urbanization and globalization on a traditional culture.An exploration on the impact of urbanization and globalization on a traditional culture.An exploration on the impact of urbanization and globalization on a traditional culture.

  • Director
    • Jia Zhang-ke
  • Writer
    • Jia Zhang-ke
  • Stars
    • Tao Zhao
    • Taishen Cheng
    • Jue Jing
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    3.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jia Zhang-ke
    • Writer
      • Jia Zhang-ke
    • Stars
      • Tao Zhao
      • Taishen Cheng
      • Jue Jing
    • 34User reviews
    • 66Critic reviews
    • 81Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 5 wins & 11 nominations total

    Videos4

    The World Scene: Our Own Twin Towers
    Clip 1:09
    The World Scene: Our Own Twin Towers
    The World Scene: Party Tonight
    Clip 1:19
    The World Scene: Party Tonight
    The World Scene: Party Tonight
    Clip 1:19
    The World Scene: Party Tonight
    The World Scene: Where Were You
    Clip 0:55
    The World Scene: Where Were You
    The World Scene: Snow
    Clip 0:53
    The World Scene: Snow

    Photos11

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    + 8
    View Poster

    Top cast14

    Edit
    Tao Zhao
    Tao Zhao
    • Tao
    Taishen Cheng
    • Taisheng
    Jue Jing
    • Wei
    Zhongwei Jiang
    • Niu
    • (as Zhong-wei Jiang)
    Yiqun Huang
    • Qun
    Hongwei Wang
    • Sanlai
    Liang Jingdong
    • Tao's ex-boyfriend
    • (as Jing Dong Liang)
    Shuai Ji
    • Erxiao
    Wan Xiang
    • Youyou
    Alla Shcherbakova
    • Anna
    Sanming Han
    Sanming Han
    • Sanming
    Juan Iu
    • Yanqing
    Xiaodong Liu
    • Karaoke singer
    Xiaoshuai Wang
    Xiaoshuai Wang
    • Director
      • Jia Zhang-ke
    • Writer
      • Jia Zhang-ke
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews34

    7.13.7K
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    Featured reviews

    9smakawhat

    Unmatched surreal universe brought to life

    How can you truly show disconnection. I think I have truly seen a master in action with Shijie, a film that takes place in a world theme park (this place does really exist) in China.

    Zhang Ke Jia is a masterful director. His use of colour and character direction is unreal. One of the things he uses to great effect are arches and hallways. Characters appear in them, or look out of them in what is some of the most visual photography I have ever witnessed. There is also a great conversation scene between two characters who don't share the same language, and the use of reflected light that is truly remarkable, make sure to watch for this scene. But it doesn't end there.

    Zhang also does something so miraculous that I thought would be impossible. He borrows heavily from Ozu, particularly a scene that is reminiscent of Tokyo Story and makes something that is uniquely his own.

    The basic synopsis of "The World", is of the lives of the workers in the theme park. Some romances develop, a foreign Russian worker Anna is introduced to the group even though she and another Chinese girl Tao don't share the same language. Everyday trials and tribulations happen for these young adults who are trying to work in the 'New China'.

    Somehow though with all the issues involved, rural people coming into the cities, technological communication, the erosion of China's agrarian past, the fakeness of place, the exploitation of workers and lead up to prostitution, the camaraderie of friends, the cheapness of life.. somehow all of these themes are jumbled into a glorious presentation that you can't take your eyes off of.

    The film is beyond surreal, its real setting makes it all more spectacular and that more effective. I had a hard time separating the actors from the characters, at times I thought I was watching a documentary and I prayed or hoped for someone to do well and be happy and find themselves thinking that these were real people in harsh sometimes difficult situations. "The World" has this effect on you, you can't begin to believe the beauty and harshness it shows, and it tricks you in the most crafty way.

    The World is a truly fantastic small place in more ways than one...

    Rating 9 out of 10
    9zhangensprachen

    realism at its most ironic

    Though this movie is to some extent, demanding on the audience, a little patience and decent memory will leave you spellbound after the movie. I do warn that if you don't have the patience for books such as The Idiot, don't watch it. Otherwise, I'm sure it will be enjoyable. Jiangke takes the candor of Yasujiro Ozu's dramas and removes kindness, whimsicality, and love and replaces these with loneliness, harshness, and austerity. Powerful combination. The lead actress acts in a way that seems to forget that it's being filmed for a movie. The level of focus on her part is astounding to me. This is in fact true for the entire cast. The irony of the movie lies in its title: The World - a word that conveys a sense of endless possibility. What you get is quite the opposite - in fact the characters seem to be confined by such a level of endless impossibility that the throughout the film, I found myself fearing an imminent gunfight. That never came but the end is equally, if not, more shocking.
    8danielri

    An excellent portrait of local citizens working in the World Theme Park in modern Beijing.

    If you want to get an aesthetic view on modern China, this is an excellent vehicle. Over two hours long, some scenes are poetic and subtle with an Eastern beauty lovely to behold. English sub-titles are well done.

    A big screen experience of common workers from the countryside and the artistic dance community in the big city of Beijing.

    There is a lot of smoking... and cell phone use, of course - this is the new China.

    Some animation sequences provide creative transitions of scenes.

    Not for the adrenaline junkie addicted to violence.

    Excellent portrayal of relationships. A true artist behind the camera. The acting is so natural.

    The backdrop and chapters are structured around the different national landmarks at the World Theme Park in Beijing.

    ( 8/10 )
    8uwmasianfilm-1

    The World Park of Modern China

    While this film is radically different from Jia's earlier films it still packs the same cultural criticism wallop. A commentary on the urbanization of modern day China, Jia has moved into the slick world of government approved film-making without losing touch with the direction of his earlier films. It is tempting to watch the film superficially and dismiss it as a glossy state approved image. However, from my perspective, what is happening in the film is much more subtle; it is form of art-making that is particular to China and its authoritarian governing systems through history.

    Practically speaking China has never enjoyed freedom of expression for its artists and writers. In order to get around censorship that came from absolute monarchies or dictatorships artists and writers would use subtle inter-textual messages. For instance, a line or radical would be left out a character to slightly change the meaning within the text. The head radical might be left out of a character describing the emperor to indicate the writers desire that the emperor be beheaded, or something along those lines. They were small enough messages that sympathizers would pick up on them, but a censor (censors usually not being the brightest or most creative people around) would miss it.

    It is my opinion that Jia Zhangke is doing something along these lines with this film. It may not be as subtle as the messages have historically been, but a close reading clearly conveys something the government wouldn't be happy with. The Chinese government would like for the world to see them as metropolitan, glitzy, shiny, and new, so Jia, in this first film of his with government backing, uses cinema-scope, modern techno beats, computer animation and up-to-date electronics. But under the glitz is the reality screaming to get through the World Park facade. It is dirty and personal. There is prostitution, crime, and pirate copiers (maybe the theme here is modern Chinese society, as promoted by the government and big business, that is the pirated copy of the rest of the world). The subsistence living youth can all have cell phones, but for all their text messaging they don't seem to be able to communicate. Basically Jia seems to say that the Chinese youth are headed for a future of oblivion under the current direction of their country. It is hard to disagree with him. But at least he he leaves a morsel of hope in the end of it all.
    8howard.schumann

    Big budget and glossy special effects

    Jia Zhangke's The World, his first state supported film, continues his look at the disillusionment of Chinese youth with Western-style globalization but shifts the setting from a rural to an urban environment. Young people work at Beijing's 114-acre "World Park", a sprawling Chinese Disneyland that displays scale models of famous landmarks such as The Eiffel Tower, The Pyramids of Egypt, The Leaning Tower of Pisa, The Taj Mahal, and The Vatican. For most of the low-paid employees, however, it is the closest they will ever come to seeing the world. Jointly produced by the Shanghai Film Group Corporation and Hong Kong's Xinghui Production Company, The World, unlike his previous independent work (Unknown Pleasures, Platform), has a big budget, glossy special effects, animation sequences, colorfully costumed song and dance routines, and uncharacteristic melodramatic plot contrivances.

    The film's main protagonists are young Chinese who have come to the city from rural areas to find work at the theme park and come in contact with migrants, petty criminals, and other lowlife characters who seem to thrive in this consumer-centered environment. The plot consists of the turbulent love affair between a dancer named Tao (Zhao Tao) who performs in lavish shows at the park and a security guard named Taisheng (Chen Taisheng) who has trouble remaining faithful to her. Zhao Tao, who has appeared in other Jia films, is sparkling in her role as the dancer whose horizons become more and more constricted. When she tells him, 'You're my whole life.' he replies, 'You can't count on anyone these days. Don't think so much of me.' As critic David Walsh points out, "all the young people have great trouble expressing their emotions to one another; they prefer cell-phones and text messages. The picture of a terribly repressed and repressive society, with vast problems and contradictions, begins to emerge".

    The employees live in overcrowded dorms or sleazy hotels and a group of Russian performers have their passports taken away when they arrive and some are forced to become prostitutes. In a heartbreaking sequence, Tao's brother Erxiao is arrested by the police for petty theft, and his brother, a construction worker known as "little sister", experiences a distressing industrial accident. Jia presents the world in small episodes, similar he says to the "way you use a computer-you click here, you click there, each time leading you to another location." The vignettes, however, did not come together for me as a totally satisfying experience and the animation effects seemed showy. The World has stunning visuals and relevant social commentary and I'm happy to see Jia achieve a wider audience by working through the system, but by the end of The World, I felt that the sharp edge of his previous films had been lost.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Visa d'exploitation en France : # 111851.
    • Quotes

      Taisheng: Are we dead?

      Tao: No, we have only just begun.

    • Connections
      References Roman Holiday (1953)

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    FAQ19

    • How long is The World?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • April 15, 2005 (China)
    • Countries of origin
      • China
      • Japan
      • France
      • Hong Kong
    • Languages
      • Mandarin
      • Russian
      • English
    • Also known as
      • World
    • Filming locations
      • Beijing World Park, Beijing, China
    • Production companies
      • Office Kitano
      • Lumen Films
      • X Stream Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $64,123
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $5,390
      • Jul 3, 2005
    • Gross worldwide
      • $246,556
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 23m(143 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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