| Index | 3 reviews in total |
10 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
Hong Tao: what an amazing actress!!, 27 May 2003
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Author:
Castor T-2 (dickdastardly75@hotmail.com) from Pavia, Italy
Finally a movie from Mainland China who's not afraid to show all the miseries of a society that is far away from being equal from an economic point of view. The contrast between the district in which the protagonist works and the richness of the business man who thinks money can buy everything could come from any capitalistic country, surely not from a supposedly communist one. But what really strikes in "Life Show" is the performance offered by Hong Tao in the role of the beautiful owner of a small restaurant doomed to be swept away by the affairs of some businessmen. Nevertheless, she remains an optimistic romantic, at least until one final unexpected blow. Worth viewing, even only for an actress that really deserves to be known abroad more than colleagues like Gong Li or Joan Chen, celebrated almost only for their look.
2 out of 2 people found the following review useful:
A solid piece of film-making, 4 July 2006
Author:
Harry T. Yung (harry_tk_yung@yahoo.com) from Hong Kong
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
This triple winner at the Shanghai IFF (including best picture and best actress TAO Hung) offers some realistic insights into life in Chongqing, through the depiction (almost snapshots) of the daily existence of Lai Shuang-yang, a rather attractive divorcée who runs a sidewalk restaurant (specializing in duck necks) in a tourist night spot. From the refreshingly unpretentious story telling, the filmmakers share with the audience the various dimensions of the protagonist's life alienation with certain members of the family, indulgence in a younger brother that she treats like her own son, a prospective romance with a frequent customer, fights for property rights under a dubious legal system, threat to survival of the tourist area and hence her restaurant,.......and more. This is a solid piece of film-making, with a good story to tell, beautiful photography and superb acting from Tao Hung, a truly amazing actress.
8 out of 15 people found the following review useful:
Good from a distance, but falls apart up close, 3 April 2005
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Author:
erhmntx from Austin, TX
When viewed from afar, "Life Show" does well at probing problems (the
socioeconomic chasm between rich and poor, the displacement brought on
by "progress" of those who were in its way, the improved since
Communism (yes, you read that correctly) but still relatively low
position of women in society, and the desperate situation of rural
workers who come into China's big cities) central to the "New China's"
meteoric rise from destitute poverty to semi-prosperity. It also
accurately shows the power of "guanxi" (personal connections and
favor-trading) in Chinese society, played out in Shuang Yang's ploy to
win a dispute over the ownership of an apartment by matching one of her
female employees to marry the manager of the Records Bureau's
presumably autistic son. Considering its low budget and the fact that
most of this film was shot on a set, the visuals were impressive,
displaying both the drabness of modern China and its unique,
semi-perverse beauty, occasionally discoverable within its endless
expanse of hastily constructed buildings, concrete, and smog. I
particularly enjoyed the scenes shot in the cable car over the Yangzi
River that distinguish the film as taking place in Chongqing, as
opposed to China's innumerable other metropolises, and communicate both
the visual richness and blandness simultaneously present in nearly
every Chinese urban area.
This film far surpasses many of its Chinese peers in both TV and film
in its attempt to "tell the truth." Many present-day Chinese
productions showcase a lifestyle of gated communities, spotless
skyscrapers, luxury cars, and American consumption patterns, a
lifestyle that all but the top 1% of the top 1% of Chinese people can
only imagine because they have seen it on TV or pirated DVDs. To its
credit, "Life Show" largely avoids this fantasy world. Perhaps due to
an adherence to the novel that spawned the film, "Life Show" deals with
its central issues (see above) in an ostensibly honest fashion.
Unfortunately, when you get down to the actual details, this film
begins to fall apart. Despite the effort apparently made by the set
designers towards realism, certain things, such as the food stand and
Shuang Yang's apartment, are multiple times too big, and too
clean-looking beyond all believability. However, the lack of realism in
the details of this film seems mainly a consequence of casting Tao Hong
as Shuang Yang (the female lead). Although Tao Hong is one of my
favorite Chinese actresses because of an elusive quality she has (I
haven't quite figured it out yet) that somehow makes her stand out from
other Chinese actresses, I feel she was poorly suited to this role
because she could not / did not perform a transformation similar to
that of Charlize Theron in "Monster", namely that of discarding the
bulk of her charm to play a character well beneath her in social status
and grace. Judging by the dialogue and Shuang Yang's occupation,
selling duck necks as street food, Shuang Yang should have been played
as the very definition of "su" (a Chinese word roughly meaning "the
opposite of elegant" with a semi-derogatory connotation halfway between
"the masses" and "poor white trash"), as her lack of education and
refinement is mentioned numerous times, especially in her conversations
with Zhuo (the male lead). Having lived in China for two years, I have
come into contact with hundreds of street vendors and small restaurant
proprietors and seen thousands more on my walks through the streets.
These types of eating establishments without exception are dirty
places, with some even bordering on squalid, and their proprietors
generally appear friendly but weathered, street-smart and not often
bathed. Yes, we are told numerous times that Shuang Yang has "benshi"
(the kind of talent that makes one successful), but that simply does
not equal the grace and beauty that Tao Hong cannot dispose herself of
in playing this role. Shuang Yang's face and nails should be dirtier,
her hands should be roughened up, and her hair shouldn't be colored.
She shouldn't be dining at a 20th floor luxury restaurant teaching her
employee girl how to eat pizza with a knife and fork (since Chinese not
of high social status typically do not know how to use a knife and
fork). We should see the filthy water in which Shuang Yang dips the rag
she uses to wipe the counter. While she is on the job, Shuang Yang
should spit, as Chinese of lower social status commonly do. Can you
even imagine Tao Hong spitting? I would laugh! Even that would probably
be graceful. Ultimately, Tao Hong is far too attractive for the
character she is playing. Food stand proprietors in China just don't
look like her. EVER! (nor do 40-year-old Floridian prostitutes look
like Charlize Theron w/o the age-producing makeup and the fat suit).
I cannot entirely blame Tao Hong for her performance in this movie or
definitively call it poor acting on her part, mostly because I suspect
she was just working with the set design and direction she was given
(and what woman would want to look unattractive?). I understand nearly
that every film includes some "dressing up" of its subjects to add
interest, or for other reasons. However, I just wish everybody involved
in the production of this film would have placed more value on closely
emulating the style and substance of those whose plight they were
trying to portray. This film could have been powerful, but in its
over-elegance, ironically settles for the film equivalent of "su".
(******6/10)
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