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| Index | 83 reviews in total |
62 out of 65 people found the following review useful:
An emotional, rewarding experience, 26 February 2005
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Author:
silentcheesedude from Florida, USA
It's a shame that not more people have seen this movie, judging by the
amount of user comments and ratings. Now that director Yimou Zhang
('Hero' & 'House of Flying Daggers') has become more popular, I'm
hoping this will change.
'Huozhe' or 'To Live' takes us on a trip in China that will last us
from the 40's through the 70's. Through that time, we will see life
through the eyes of Fugui and Jiazhen, a husband and wife with 2
children, as well as Fugui's mother.
Fugui, the husband, has a gambling problem which will set off a chain
of events that will have them lose the house, and eventually separate
the family. Jiazhen, his wife, is forced to take a job which will put a
strain on her children. Communist and nationalist armies battle each
other, and the rise of Chairman Mao will affect them as well. Fugui
will go through layers of mishaps that will change him forever. I don't
want to detail anything more about the plot, it's much more worth
viewing it and experiencing it then anything I can ever say here.
Not once is this movie boring, effectively placing us there, with the
family. The acting seems so natural that it feels like you are there,
traveling with them, rather then viewing them through a camera. This of
course shows the strength of Zhang's directing. You Ge plays Fugui, a
popular actor in China, won the award for the Cannes Film Festival. Li
Gong is beautiful, and portrays her character with such passion, it's
no wonder she has been nominated nearly a dozen times, winning most.
Emotional without being sappy, honest, & historically accurate, the
film does have a black shroud covering it. In times of sadness, it's
lifted a bit to allow us to see happiness, indeed, life, pull this
family together. It even has bits of humor in it, at times, I laughed
along with the family as much as I felt their pain. Little details,
such paintings in the background that chip away as time goes by, shows
how much care went into making this film. Characters that seem
unimportant become part of the story later.
What a wonderful film. When I saw it 10 years ago, it not only changed
the way I saw foreign movies, it also changed the way I see life and
people. Any movie that can do that is one I highly recommend to anyone.
A perfect 10 out of 10.
43 out of 46 people found the following review useful:
Simple epic, masterfully made, 19 July 2003
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Author:
Simon Booth from UK
When I re-watched FAREWELL MY CONCUBINE recently I was surprised that it
was
much less political than I remembered it being. Turns out that's because
I'd
somehow merged together that film and TO LIVE together in my poor muddled
brain. Both have some similarities, beyond the common appearance of Gong
Li
in front and Zhang Yimou behind the camera, but TO LIVE definitely
confronts
the political (I should really say "social") aspects of the decades they
cover much more directly and forcefully.
TO LIVE (aka LIFETIMES - I dunno what the Chinese name is) basically
covers
3 or 4 decades of one family's life in China, in a period that saw not
one
but two revolutions, and looks at the effect the social upheaval had on
ordinary people's lives. The film rarely criticises the political
movements
instigated by Mao Tse Tung, but does an effective job of showing the
hellishness of a society that has been turned on its head, where the
people
are forced to change not just the way they live but the way they think,
and
people are forced into social relationships that are new, and quite
possibly
against human nature.
I hope I won't jeapordise my visa if I admit that I had strong leanings
towards Communism when I was younger, having read Marx in philosophy
classes. His picture of a society without private possessions or social
hierarchy did seem very appealing, but Marx acknowledged that the only
way
for such a society to work was if every member saw the value of it and
willingly took part in it, and admitted that the only way that was likely
to
happen was via massive revolution - i.e. killing everyone that didn't
agree
with the plan. As a teenager, that didn't seem like such a big price or
problem
Certainly I'm not the only person to have considered this price worth
paying, and a couple of people have actually put the plan into practice -
lamentably with less than stellar results. Mao Tse Tung is, I guess, the
undisputed king of Communist revolution, having led TWO of them in China,
and probably disrupting more peoples' lives than anybody else in history
in
the process. TO LIVE gives those of us that haven't had to live through
such
conditions some idea of what it might have been like. People used to the
cushy capitalist western lifestyle might wonder just how on earth people
can
live through conditions like that, but that's the what the film wants to
say... life might deal you some crappy hands, but people are remarkably
adaptable and resilient, and you've just got to try to live the best you
can. It sounds remarkably trite put like that, but the film does a good
job
of expressing it.
The film is based on a novel, with the author co-writing the screenplay
as
well. Zhang Yimou directs brilliantly as usual, which in this case is to
recognise the strength of the story and characters and to back off a
little,
giving them space to live their lives. Although the film looks great
throughout, the cinematography is quite unobtrusive. He once more elicits
a
great performance from Gong Li and the rest of the cast, with leading man
Ge
You giving the best one of all. The film has occasionally been criticised
for throwing piling too much tragedy on, but this is never done in an
exploitative/manipulative way, and Zhang Yimou avoids turning to
melodrama
to evoke an audience reaction... which makes him all the more likely to
get
one (and without the audience feeling used afterwards).
In a career full of magnificent films, TO LIVE stands as one of Zhang
Yimou's finest moments. The film is epic yet remarkably simple, and the
execution is as near to flawless as I've seen. I doubt that even Akira
Kurosawa could have handled the material better, which is to say that
Zhang
Yimou surely ranks in the world's top echelon of film-makers. Long may
his
life and career continue
Highest recommendation!
35 out of 36 people found the following review useful:
An All-Time Top Ten Film, 15 June 2002
Author:
intuitive7 from yti54
This is Zhang Yimou's and Gong Li's crowning triumph -- a top candidate
for
the greatest Chinese film of all time. Splendidly photographed and
composed,
consumately acted and faithfully scored, "To Live" is a three or four hour
film novel lovingly packed into two hours and fifteen minutes. For a long
time, Ingmar Bergman's "Fanny and Alexander" stood by itself as the
greatest
family epic in my moviegoing experience. "The Best Years of Our Lives" ran
a
distant second. But since 1995 "To Live" has moved into a very close
second.
Most Chinese who lived through Mao's Revolution say this film tells it
like
it was at the simple townsperson level. Though it can serve as an overview
of Chinese history 1944 to 1970 or so, unlike Lean's "Gandhi" or "Lawrence
of Arabia", this is not a hero's biopic. Instead we see a foolish, once
rich
but now fallen heir and his wife blown about by the winds of fortune for
three decades and challenged as parents trying to raise two children under
increasingly harsh and punitive communist tyranny. What you sense in this
film, that I've never seen before in any Chinese film, is how the ethical
and moral principles that have prevailed in Chinese culture for 2500
years -
a mix of transcendence and pragmatism, humility and grit, cosmic harmonic
balance and social duty - allows an ordinary couple to accept unbearable
tragedy and keep going. It also shows what this survival strategy costs
them
in their Communist context. The screenplay is full of cosmic irony. It
makes
us aware, without shouting, that this is just one family among millions.
As
Yimou's transitional screen message says: "...leaving no family
unaffected".
It is to that extent, a tribute film.
Maybe ten hours of Kieslowski's "Decalogue" might accomplish the same
broad
survey of of human happenstance and emotion. Maybe Kurosawa in three or
four
hours. But never in two plus hours have I seen the scope Zhang Yimou
achieves here. "To Live" also contains as wise a moral lesson as any film
I've seen, and it's a gentle one despite the surrounding violence. I
couldn't paraphrase the lesson for you. I wouldn't try. Just watch. It
will
reach you non-verbally in about 90 minutes. Just know, this isn't
Shakespeare, Hollywood or soap opera. It's something else.
Gong Li's work is as powerful as anything Streep or Sarandon have ever
done
in the west - which is all the more inspiring since the camera doesn't
lavish star-level attention on her. As her husband, Ge You turns in an
emotionally riveting, charming, sometimes funny and devastatingly honest
performance. The direction is sure handed, the shooting unfailingly
gorgeous. Zhang Yimou's cinematic canvass has never been so big or his
palette so colorful and controlled. Full of spectacle, great sweeps of
time
and onrushing tides of humanity, "To Live" is still, in the end, a sweet
and
poignant epic with an intimate, observant heart. Great story telling. Do
not miss! Try to view a letterbox version on a big screen.
27 out of 32 people found the following review useful:
Beautiful, painfully heartbreaking., 21 December 1999
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Author:
Peter Chung (petec-2) from Sunnyvale, Ca
I think most of us can watch Freddy Krueger rip people apart and barely
flinch.
Not that Nightmare on Elm Street is a bad film, it never inflicts pain on
the viewer.
But this film is so beautiful and so real, that it's unbearably
heartbreaking at times. Every time I watch it, and I know a particular
heartbreaking scene is coming up, I almost want to turn it off, but I'm
just
frozen in place, forced to experience the pain of the people on screen,
that
I've traveled three decades with. Zhang's understanding of the people of
China, and the tragedy of history is full of empathy, respect, and
adoration. In every scene, Gong Li embodies strength and beauty. Zhang's
study of communism and of the Chinese government, isn't a villifying one
sided argument, but one with complete understanding of the tragedy of this
huge social experiment, that effected not only China, but the whole
world.
As a Korean American, I draw some appreciation at the parallel effects on
Communism on Korea. Mao-Kim, Taiwan-SouthKorea. But this is a truly
universal movie, and anyone would enjoy it.
21 out of 23 people found the following review useful:
Glory to the revolution..., 20 April 2006
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Author:
Dennis Littrell (dalittrell@yahoo.com) from SoCal
Not.
What I think Zhang Yimou's message here is that the will of the people
"to live," as in the title, to survive and overcome obstacles is what
defines the Chinese people. They ride the ox of communism as a boat
rides a wave. They adapt.
Consider that tall and thin Fugui (played with consummate skill by You
Ge) says that a chick will become a chicken when it grows up, and then
a sheep and then an ox and then the Communist Party. But as the film
ends he tells his grandson only that the chick will become a chicken
and then a sheep and then an ox. He doesn't mention communism. In this
way we know that the people have tamed the ox.
Zhang's film is an epic parable of life in China in the 20th century.
It opens before the communist revolution with protagonist Fugui as a
wayward son who is gambling the family fortune away. His wife, Jiazhen
(Gong Li) pleads with him to stop, but he cannot. He is addicted to
vice. Symbolically he represents the old regime. He loses everything,
wife included and goes to live in the streets. After some time the
revolutionary war begins and he and his friends find it convenient to
switch sides and join the revolutionary army--he as an entertainer for
the troops, a puppeteer. He and wife reunite and become loyal and even
enthusiastic communists. He is lucky to have lost his fortune for now
he is recognized as a hero of the revolution, while the man who won his
family's house at dice is declared a counter-revolutionary and meets a
bad end.
As in every Zhang Yimou film I have seen, everything is beautifully and
exquisitely done. His work is characterized by an artist's sense of
color and form, by an engaging simplicity in the telling, and by a
subtle sense of what is going on politically, and especially by a deep
and abiding sense of humanity. Here the transformation of Chinese
society from feudalism to communism to the capitalist/communism hybrid
that exists today is shown through the eyes and experiences of the
people; and what is emphasized is the endurance and the will of the
people to survive, adapt and finally to flourish regardless of who
might be in power.
I would compare Zhang Yimou to the very greatest directors, say, to
Stanley Kubrick, to Francis Ford Coppola, to Louis Malle, to Krzysztof
Kieslowski in sheer artistic talent. Like Malle he is warm and honest
about human beings and what they do without being maudlin or
sentimental. Like Coppola he has an epic-maker's vision, and like the
Coppola of the Godfather films, a strong sense of family. Like Kubrick
he is creative and always aware of the needs of the audience, and like
Kieslowski he is clever.
This is in some respects Zhang Yimou's finest achievement because of
the way he tells the story of communism in China. I am reminded of the
way Louis Malle tells the truth about human sexuality without inciting
the censors. Here Zhang Yimou tells the truth about the communist
experience in China, subtly demonstrating its cruelties and stupidities
without, amazing enough, incurring the wrath of the authorities. (Some
of his films have been banned in China, but I understand they are
readily available nonetheless.) Here the kids are smiling and happy as
they work in the steel mill. The accident that kills Fugui's son is
seen as just that, an accident and not the fault of the "Great Leap
Forward." The members of the educated class, who are ridiculed, beaten
and banished (and worse) during the "Cultural Revolution," accept their
fate as their just deserts--the doctor who insists that it is better to
wear the placard shaming him that is hung from around his neck than it
is to take it off. The local official who has preached and practiced
the communist line faithfully, who finds himself being labeled a
capitalist, also accepts his fate as though in doing so he is
furthering a cause larger than himself.
In a way Zhang Yimou's international celebrity and reputation as one of
the world's greatest film makers protects him. In another sense his
depictions of the sins and excesses of the old regime before communism
are so well done and appreciated by all, that such an expression also
protects him.
Nonetheless, I do not personally consider this Zhang Yimou's best film.
I prefer the startling beauty of Raise the Red Lantern (1991) and Red
Sorghum (1987) as well as the charming Not One Less (1999) or the
simple but powerful, The Story of Qiu Ju. However, this is an
outstanding film.
Notable in a supporting role is Wu Jiang as Wan Erxi the strong young
man with the limp who marries the mute daughter. I have seen him in
Shower (1999) in which his personal charisma and strength of character
are shown more fully. He is the younger brother of Wan Jiang who
starred in Zhang Yimou's first film, Red Sorghum. Of course Gong Li,
one of the finest actresses of our time, who is often featured in Zhang
Yimou's films, is outstanding as always.
(Note: Over 500 of my movie reviews are now available in my book "Cut
to the Chaise Lounge or I Can't Believe I Swallowed the Remote!" Get it
at Amazon!)
18 out of 19 people found the following review useful:
Chinese history on a human scale, 14 February 2006
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Author:
marissas75 from United States
Yimou Zhang's "To Live" begins in the late 1940s and covers several
decades in the life of Fugui (You Ge), his wife Jiazhen (Li Gong), and
their two children. It is an excellent family drama, provoking both
laughter and tears, and distinguishing itself from similar movies
because of its commitment to showing how China's changing society
affects the family. It takes the huge subject of "the first twenty
years of Communism in China," and brings it down to a human scale.
Both leading actors nicely portray the way their characters change over
the years. At first, Fugui is the stereotypical "callow young man" and
Jiazhen the even more stereotypical "long- suffering wife," but the
screenplay and actors eventually deepen the characterizations.
The best sequence of the film covers the Chinese Civil War. Wisely,
Yimou Zhang resists the temptation to make the movie too epic, and
instead focuses on Fugui's personal experiences. The result is a very
moving depiction of the human cost of war. In another striking touch,
Fugui's hobby is singing with a shadow-puppet troupe. The puppets not
only provide an interesting glimpse into traditional Chinese culture,
they also take on a symbolic meaning.
After watching "To Live," it's easy to see why the Chinese authorities
banned it: there's a lot of tragedy in the film, and in most cases,
Communism is to blame. Remarkably, though, Zhang also makes many of the
Communist characters sympathetic. For instance, Fugui and Jiazhen's
daughter marries an officer in the Red Guards, who is a little
ridiculous in his devotion to Mao Zedong, but not a villain. This is in
keeping with the overall spirit of "To Live"--humanistic and subtle,
instead of bombastic or propagandistic. It's both an important
examination of recent Chinese history, and a universal story about how
individual human beings manage "to live" in times of hardship. A rare
combination, and one well worth seeing.
19 out of 23 people found the following review useful:
Impressive, objective film, 26 January 2004
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Author:
kintopf432 (kintopf432@hotmail.com) from St. Paul, MN
Impressive observational film about mid-20th-century China, which is brought into focus through the tribulations of one family over a thirty-plus-year period. Others here have called it a Chinese `Gone with the Wind,' but in this respect it's more like a Chinese `Les Misérables,' albeit on a smaller scale. What's most remarkable about it is how it manages to be both a political film, and an objective one--it judges the political happenings that serve as its backdrop, yes, but we never get the sense that it is PRE-judging them. `Huozhe' is no propaganda film--it allows its events to unfold organically, and allows us to infer its meaning on our own. The fact that director Zhang Yimou's approach is so delicate makes what happened after the film's release even more sad, and more telling--the film was banned, and Zhang and one of his stars, Gong Li, were barred from filmmaking for two years. Casual viewers may find that shocking, as the overall tone is one of affection and optimism for one's country, and the characters are more interested in simply staying together (and alive) than in declaring any kind of political allegiance. Technically, the film is lovely as well, with beautiful cinematography and fine performances by Ge You and Gong making it as satisfying aesthetically as it is intellectually. 8 out of 10.
18 out of 22 people found the following review useful:
Moving, comic and political despite being a little bleak at times it is almost without flaw, 25 January 2003
Author:
bob the moo
Reasonably well off, Fugui loses all his money due to his gambling
addiction. Eventually he loses his house in a game of dice with Long'er.
Fugui's pregnant wife Jiazhen leaves him when it is clear he wants his vice
over her. With poverty, Fugui comes to his senses and starts work with his
own puppet troupe. On the birth of their son Jiazhen returns to the
reformed Fugui, but civil war breaks out and Fugui leaves to fight. With
things difficult already, the rise of the Maoist regime makes things ever
more difficult and the Xu family suffer fortune and misfortune as Communism
is formed.
I watched this movie because it had won the top award at Cannes. I hadn't
high hopes for some reason, but I figured it was worth a look. I am very
glad I did because it is a wonderful little piece that can be enjoyed with
little knowledge of the regime against which it is set. The story follows
the family's misfortunes and how they are affected by the rise of Chairman
Mao. Their plight is touching as they suffer wrongs but also show
compassion on others all the while trying to do the right thing by the
system that is impacting on them. Even when tragedy occurs they never blame
Communism but heap it on themselves instead.
This unfolds over many years with the rise of Mao as the backdrop. The
parrellel between the two things is clear without being forced or rammed
down our throats it's a wonderful bit of handling. Even better is the
infusion of comic touches all the way through, the dialogue (even in
subtitle form) is great and is witty and touching I laughed out loud many
times.
Not having seen any other films by Zhang, I can only hope they are as good
as this one. The cast, too, do a great job with the film. You Ge's Fugui
is fabulous he is a draw from the start on, and his ageing is so
convincing that credit must go not only to the makeup but also to Ge for
doing so well with potentially tragic figure. Likewise Gong is superb but
ages less convincingly. The support cast are all good from the children
through to the figures of Mao like Jiang and Niu. The only thing that
saddened me about the two great leads is to think that Western cinema will
never care to have them in any films I guess that when it comes to Hong
Kong cinema Hollywood only are interested if it has slow-motion and guns!
(and they think they're cutting edge!)
Overall I find it very hard to fault this film as it has so much going for
it on so many levels. Just as a human story it is excellent, and the
historical context only serves to make it better. Comic and touching right
to it's perfectly pitched close, this should be searched out by anyone who
wants a genuinely moving human tale with political comment sown into each
frame without intrusion.
7 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Heartwarming story of a Chinese family's struggles, 29 June 2003
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Author:
senortuffy from Glen Ellen, CA
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This is a beautiful story of one family as they cope with the changing times
in revolutionary China. Through their eyes, we get a glimpse of what life
must have been like for an average person in those days.
The story begins with Fugui gambling away his family's home. Urbane and
self-confident, he is quickly broken by the loss of his home and his father,
who dies from shame. Having to leave his mother in the care of the new
owner, he goes off with some puppets that have been loaned to him, making a
living putting on shows around the countryside. He gets caught up in the
revolution, helps the communist army, and eventually returns to find the
wife and family he left behind.
Nearly the entire story takes place in the city where he lives, a small side
street in particular - no more than an alley by western standards. Fugui's
wife, Jiazhen, lovingly played by the great actress, Gong Li, has been given
a job by the local committee hauling hot water to local families. Fugui
settles in and begins entertaining the neighborhood with his puppet shows.
They have a mute daughter, Fengxia, and a precocious son, Youging.
We see the family grow up and undergo changes, most of them tragic. Much of
the action is tied to the political climate that evolves from the revolution
through the period of the Red Guards (50's, 60's, early 70's). The son is
killed by accident when a party official backs his jeep into a wall and
crushes him. The father is told that his puppets are now considered
counter-revolutionary, so he has to give up that pleasure. The daughter
marries a kindly party official from a local factory, but dies in childbirth
after the nursing students have expelled the doctors from the maternity ward
for not being politically pure enough.
Through it all the family perseveres, not with any great histrionics, but
with acceptance and love. The parents are simple people who just want
what's best for their children, but because of the circumstances set in
action by the communists, they lose their daughter and son.
This isn't an overly political film. The communist officials aren't
depicted as evil, but neither are they particularly heroic. The local party
leader is friendly and helpful to the family, as is the son-in-law. But
apparently the depiction of the party in less than glowing terms during this
period was offensive enough for the Chinese government to ban this film.
Which is too bad because it's a tribute to the strength of the Chinese
people and not a slam at communism per se.
This is a beautiful film with a haunting musical theme running through it.
I highly recommend it.
8 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Such a moving piece, 31 March 2006
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Author:
jedmalkavian from United States
This movie, which was banned in mainland China for "Questionable"
outlooks on the communist party, is one of the best movies I have seen
thus far.
It is easy to dismiss this movie as a "Sad period piece," but with
another look, one sees that this is a story about triumph... of taking
heart in the fact that one lives. The title, "To Live," is very apt, as
we see the rises and falls of one small family living through the ups
and downs of China during the pre-revolutionary era, the civil war, the
Great Leap Forward, the Proletariat Cultural Revolution, and beyond.
This movie is at turns dramatic, humorous, touching, chilling,
heart-wrenching, and triumphant. A true roller coaster of emotions,
played out in the subtle tones only Chinese film can truly capture.
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