Teacher Gao loves the students in his poor village and is devoted to educating them in the hope of their greater futures. When he is called away to tend to his dying mother for a month, the Mayor calls in an inexperienced 13 year-old replacement, Wei Minzhi; much to Teacher Gao's dismay. Teacher Gao cannot stand the thought of .. Read more
| Starring | Wei Minzhi, Zhang Huike |
|---|---|
| Director | Yimou Zhang |
| Genres | Drama, World Cinema |
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Teacher Gao loves the students in his poor village and is devoted to educating them in the hope of their greater futures. When he is called away to tend to his dying mother for a month, the Mayor calls in an inexperienced 13 year-old replacement, Wei Minzhi; much to Teacher Gao's dismay. Teacher Gao cannot stand the thought of losing anymore students: he has already lost twelve to ever-increasing attrition, and he promises Wei an extra 10 yuan if she succeeds in ensuring that upon his return, there will be not one less. Wei's difficult mission to fulfill Teacher Gao's wish and her own concern for the welfare of the children begins.
| Starring | Wei Minzhi, Zhang Huike |
|---|---|
| Director | Yimou Zhang |
| Studio | SONY PICTURES HOME ENTERTAINMENT |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 42 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Drama, World Cinema |
| Language | Mandarin |
| Subtitles | Arabic, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hindi, Hungarian, Icelandic, Italian, Norweigan, Polish, Portuguese, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish |
| Released | DVD: 17 Sep 2001 Production year: 1999 |
| Format | DVD |
Shades of The Story of Qiu Ju colour this sentimental but engaging drama from director Zhang Yimou. Wryly humanist but subtly political, the winner of the Golden Lion at Venice starts out in a poor village school whose enrolment is more important than its teaching. However, once 13-year-old stand-in teacher Wei Minzhi sets off to retrieve the runaway student who can deprive her of a bonus for keeping all 28 charges in class, the focus is that of a powerful contemporary urban drama. Made with a non-professional cast, the movie includes a sublime performance from Wei, and remains heart-warming without losing the power of its message.
Zhang Yimou coaxes good performances from a cast of non-professionals in a small-scale movie that begins as a vivid portrait of modern China before succumbing to sentimentality, complete with a plug for Coca-Cola, and a contrived, feel-good ending.
Why this movie did not achieve world wide renown is a mystery, because
it is one of the most touching, honest films i've ever seen. It has a vivid sense of place - a dirt-poor, dusty,
forgotten village in China's
mountains where a piece of chalk in the run-down school is a precious
commodity.
The film focuses on the trials and challenges of a 13 year old teacher
with an unshakeable sense of duty who has to teach an unruly class. A
wonderful adventure unfolds, involving ultimately an entire television
station, and to cap it all the film is acted by amateurs.
This is a haunting classic of world cinema.
Up to now this is mid-career Zhang Yimon - stripped bare of the mega-star cast and the mega budgets of his recent work, without the Thomas Hardy-like breadth of his earlier work, it is a simply pastoral with ultimately is let down by the poltical hegemony within which he is forced to reside.
A simple, charming tale - but deceptively simple when redemption comes in the form of The Party.