XIU XIU


Title   Cast   Director   Year Shown  Other Info    Country  Notes 




USA, 1998, 100 min

Shown in 1998

CREDITS

dir
Joan Chen
prod
Joan Chen, Allison Liu, Cecile Shah Tsuei
scr
Yan Geling, Joan Chen
cam
Lu Yue
editor
Ruby Yang
cast
LuLu, Lopsang

OTHER

source
Good Machine, Inc., 417 Canal Street, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10013. FAX: 212-343-9645
premiere
North American Premiere

COMMENTS

Eligible for the Skyy Prize.
Xiu Xiu

An astonishingly confident directorial debut from San Francisco-based actress Joan Chen, Xiu Xiu is a heartbreaking coming-of-age melodrama set during the later stages of the Cultural Revolution. A young girl, Xiu Xiu, is sent to a desolate part of Tibet to learn horse breeding from her trainer, Lao Jin, a serene Tibetan herdsman. Deserted in such a bleak, uncompromising landscape, Xiu Xiu dreams of a better life, but slowly realizes that the authorities have no intention of ever rescuing her. Her dreams shattered, she is coerced into sex by visiting townsmen and their promises of “help.” But no help ever comes, and the silent, love-struck Lao Jin is left as her only hope. Chen’s slow-building moods and self-assured narrative tone recall the emotional power and underlying social critique inherent in mainland China’s Fifth Generation filmmakers as well as the work of their predecessor Xie Jin (whose 1977 film, Youth, saw Chen in one of her first starring roles). Austere, uncluttered—no unnecessary dramatic pyrotechnics or visual exotica—Xiu Xiu achieves a purity of vision not found in most contemporary cinema. Coaxing gorgeously refined performances out of radiant newcomer Lu Lu and the Tibetan-born Lopsang, Chen weaves a story of love unspoken and love lost, and in so doing introduces an exciting new voice to world cinema.

—Jason Sanders

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