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March 8, 2014
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
To Live

Wikipedia

 
To Live (Chinese_language|Chinese: 活着), aka Lifetimes, is a China|Chinese movie directed by Zhang Yimou in 1994, with leading roles played by Ge You and Gong Li. It is based on the novel of the same name written by Yu Hua.

The movie was banned in Mainland China due to its satirical portrayal of various policies and campaigns of the communist government. It won the Special Jury Prize during the Cannes Film Festival as well as the Best Actor Award for Ge You.




spoiler

The story begins some time in the 1940s. Xu Fugui (Ge You) is a local rich man's son and compulsive gambler, who loses his family property to the scheming Long'er, driving his father to his grave in the process. His behaviour also causes his long-suffering wife Jiazhen (Gong Li) to leave him with their daughter, Fengxia and their unborn son, Youqing.

After he loses his entire family fortune, Fugui eventually reunites with his wife and children, but is forced to start a shadow puppet troupe with partner Chunsheng to support his family. The Chinese Civil War is in full swing at the time, and both Fugui and Chunsheng are forcibly enlisted into the Kuomintang forces during a performance. After a heavy battle, Fugui and Chunsheng are captured by the communist side, where they quickly become entertainers for the troops. Eventually Fugui is able to return home, and once there, finds out that Fengxia has become mute due to a fever.

After the communist victory, Fugui attends a local public trial where the new communist authority convicts and executes a local landlord accused of sabotaging the revolution. Fugui finds out that the man being executed is Long'er, to whom he lost his entire family fortune in gambling. Long'er also recognizes Fugui, and tries to break free from his capturers, but he is brought away, and shot. The situation frightens Fugui so much that he urinates himself. Afterwards he tells his wife that if he didn't squander away his fortune, he would be the one getting shot. Luckily, Fugui is penniless, and is thus exalted as a "townsfolk in poverty" by the communists. A certificate affirming Fugui's status as a member of the Communist revolution becomes the family's most prized possession, and is framed and hung up.

The story moves forward a decade into the future, to the heyday of the Great Leap Forward. The local town chief enlists Fugui and Jiazhen to donate all scrap iron in their possession to the national drive to produce steel and make weaponry for liberating Taiwan. As an entertainer, Fugui performs for the entire town, which has been devoted entirely over to producing steel. They enter this work with great passion, and the movie devotes some time to portraying the family's unity and happiness. For example, the young boy Youqing defends his sisters from bullies picking on her for her muteness.

The happiness of the family is then cruelly dashed. Youqing falls asleep sitting against the walls of his school, after having lost several days of sleep working for the town's steel drive. The wall is hit by the car of the district head, who has also lost several days of sleep due to the steel drive. Fugui's son is crushed and killed. In the next scene, the crowd shows Fugui the mangled body of his son, then hides it from the hysterical Jiazhen. In a twist of irony, the district head turns out to be Chunsheng, Fugui's former shadow puppet performance colleague during the Chinese Civil War, who has since risen through the ranks of the communist party. At the gravesite of the boy, his mother leaves for him a lunchbox full of 20 old dumplings, which were intended as his lunch for school that day, plus 20 newly made dumplings. Chunsheng arrives at the grave, but his contrite attempts to apologize and compensate the family are rebuffed by the grieving family.

The story moves forward again another decade, to the Cultural Revolution. The village chief advises Fugui's family to burn their shadow puppet drama props, which have been deemed as counter-revolutionary as they are traditional cultural elements. Also, Fugui's daughter is now grown up. Her family arranges for her to meet Wan Erxi, who is a local organization leader, a worker with a salary, and also a kind-hearted and caring man, but lame in one leg. They fall in love and marry.

It is found out as a side plot that Chunsheng, the district chief, have been subject to "overthrowing" by the revolution. He arrives late at night to inform Fugui and Jiazhen that his wife has killed herself; he himself wants to do the same thing. Jiazhen, who up to that point has refused to talk to the man who killed her son, breaks the ice and tells him to keep living, because "you still owe us a life!".

During Fengxia's childbirth, her parents and husband accompany her to the county hospital, where they find out that nurses are in charge as all doctors have been "overthrown" for being "reactionary academic authorities". The nurses assure the family that they have nothing to fear, but the family is skeptical, and manages to retrieve a doctor from confinement to oversee the birth, under the pretext of making the doctor "see his revolutionary mistakes". As the doctor has not eaten for several days, the family purchases for him seven steamed buns (mantou). However, the young woman begins to hemorrhage, and the nurses panic, admitting that they are only students and do not know what to do. The frantic family and nurses seek the advice of the doctor, but it is found out that he has overeaten and is semiconscious. The family is helpless, and Jiazhen can only hold the hand of her daughter as she slowly dies.

The movie ends several years later, with the family now consisting of Fugui, Jiazhen, their son-in-law Erxi, and grandson Mantou. The family visits the graves of Youqing and Fengxia, where Jiazhen, as per tradition, leaves dumplings for her son. Erxi buys for his son a box full of young chicks, which they decide to keep in the puppet drama prop chest, now empty of its contents. The family then sits down to eat, and the film ends.




Both implicitly and explicitly, the film criticizes the policies of the Chinese communist government.

fr:Vivre
sv:Att leva (1994)
tr:Ya??amak (To Live)
zh:活着
Category:Chinese films
Category:1994 films
Category:Chinese novels

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "To Live".


Last Modified:   2005-11-07


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