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The 51st Berlinale: Part 5
Asian films at the Berlin Film Festival
By Stefan Steinberg
7 March 2001
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A number of Asian films were amongst the most satisfying as
well as thought provoking experiences at this year's Berlin Film
Festival.
Beijing Bicycle
by Wang Xiaoshuais
Wang Xiaoshuais is a member of the so-called sixth generation
of Chinese filmmakers who acknowledges his debt to Taiwanese film,
in particular the work of the Taiwanese director Hou Hsiao-hsien
(see interview with Wang Xiaoshuais at the 1999 Toronto Film Festivallink
below). In his latest work Wang takes up a theme which he has
dealt with before (notably in So Close to Paradise 1995)the
experiences of a provincial youth trying to find his feet in the
big city. Beijing Bicycle won second prize (Silver Bear)
at the Berlin Film Festival with best young actor awards going
to the film's two main characters.
Newly arrived in Beijing, Guo is lucky enough to
find work as a bicycle courier. In the opening scene we see the
ranks of scrubbed new recruits to the courier firm standing alongside
their gleaming new bicycles. The manager of the firm explains
proudly and sternly to his assembled workers that, in line with
the company's emphasis on professionalism, every courier has been
given a shower, hair-cut, new uniforms and a sturdy modern mountain
bike. The boss explains the feudal-type contract which binds the
workers to the company. The company gets 80 percent of everything
the couriers earn, from the remaining 20 percent the workers are
then expected to pay for the cost of their bikes in instalments.
The boss points to a huge wall map of the arteries of Beijing.
Their first job, he tells them, is to learn every street thoroughly!
Guo and his fellow workers are the new generation of rickshaw
coolies.
Guo sets to work in the bewildering chaos of the streets of
Beijing. In one hilarious scene he rides to a luxury hotel to
pick up a parcel from a customer. Entering the lobby he asks for
the customer who has a very common Chinese name. He is told the
man is waiting for him in the sauna. With wide eyes Guo passes
through the luxurious surroundings of the hotel. At the entrance
to the sauna he is asked to divest his shoes and clothes and then
directed to the shower. After taking his shower he is finally
directed to his alleged customer, enjoying a massage with other
members of the Chinese capitalist elite. However it is someone
with the right name, but the wrong man.
Guo is curtly dismissed, dresses, travels back to the hotel
lobby to once again find his customer. He has lost time and, what
is more, the receptionist insists he pay for his showera
price evidently equivalent to a few weeks wages. He tries to make
a run for it only to be apprehended by the hotel's security force.
With a marvellously light touch Xiaoshuai's handling of the entire
scene casts a withering glance at the gulf between rich and poor
in contemporary China.
In feudal times the peasant possessed his own plot of land.
All Guo has in modern day China is his bicycle. The loss of his
bicycle means the loss of his job, income and means of survival.
First stolen and then recovered, Guo throws all of life's energy
into a struggle to stubbornly hold onto his bike. A theme which
could have been merely banal in fact develops into a compelling
tale of Guo's attempts to measure up to the demands made upon
him by the big city, throwing light in particular on the extreme
competitive pressures bearing down on the young generation of
workers and students.
Wang's work has previously run into problems with the Chinese
authorities. So Close to Paradise was held up for three
years by the Chinese censors. Although Wang's new film was completed
some time ago, it is still awaiting approval from the Chinese
Filmbureau. With or without approval from the authorities, Beijing
Bicycle is confirmation of the current vitality of filmmaking
in various pockets of the Asian subcontinent.
Wharf of Widows
by Luu Trong Ninh
Particular attention was given at this year's Berlin festival
to new films from Vietnam. Of particular interest were a number
of films dealing with the two wars fought by Vietnam, first against
French occupying colonial powers (1946-56) and then against American
aggression. The vast majority of Vietnamese films dealing with
the wars have stressed the heroism of the Vietnamese soldiers.
With two films at the festival Luu Trong Ninh directs his attention
instead to the role of Vietnamese women in the war. The Crossing
at Dong Loc deals with a team of young women whose job it
was to detonate US bombs which had failed to explode. Made in
1997, the film contrasts the spontaneity and vitality of the women
with the ominous nature of the work they carry out. Luu Trong
Ninh's most recent film Wharf of Widows deals with the
tribulations of Vietnamese women living for nearly two generations
in villages almost entirely depopulated of men and is a much more
sober treatment of the repercussions of the war for ordinary Vietnamese.
Van, the main figure in Wharf of Widows, returns to
his village as a young man and combat hero after the war against
France. The older women in the village have all lost their men
in the war. Those young men in the village available for the younger
women are soon to be commandeered in a new war. Traditional Vietnamese
life was strongly based on the family, now the young women have
to adapt to lives where they will probably never have husbands.
Their mothers will never have grandchildren. Van is drawn towards
the war widow Nhan, but she is a former landowner and the expropriation
of land is in full swinga relationship is impossible between
the war hero Van and the former landowner. The only available
man in the village is frustrated in his choice of partner.
With a minimum of dialogue Luu Trong Ninh's attentive camera
conjures up images of people and scenery expressing the grim determination
with which the villagers attempt to come to terms with their fate.
Perhaps the most poignant image in the film is an old woman of
the village literally bent doubleher back buckled under
the burden Vietnamese women were forced to carry in the war.
Joint Security Area
by Park Chan Wook
In terms of audience attendance, Park Chan Wook's new work
Joint Security Area is the most popular and successful
film in the history of South Korean cinema, drawing bigger crowds
than any of the recent Hollywood blockbusters. Its theme is the
division of North and South Korea. The scene of the action is
the Joint Security Area (JSA), a circle with a diameter of 800
metres situated in the demilitarised zone separating North and
South. Since being established in 1954 after the bloody Korean
war and following a stream of incidents and provocations leading
to shoot-outs between the two sides, the militarised zone between
Stalinist North and capitalist South Korea has gained the reputation
of being the most dangerous border in the world.
In Park Chan Wook's film a shootout between soldiers from the
North and South results in the death of two North Koreans and
the wounding of another. At the same time a South Korean soldier
is discovered cowering on the bridge (The Bridge of No Return)
spanning the two antagonistic nations. Lieutenant Sophie Jean
is given the job of investigating the incident. Piecing together
diverse, conflicting bits of information, Jean discovers that
the background to the shooting was, in fact, fraternisation between
soldiers of both sides.
Director Park Chan Wook has drawn from his previous experience
making gangster-milieu films to weave his story into a dense investigative
drama. On occasion the graphic repetition of the shootout between
the soldiers irritates. The strongest scenes in the film are those
dealing with the extent of Cold War propaganda pursued by the
two regimes on their respective sides of the border and, something
very rare in South Korean cinema, the sympathetic portrayal of
North Koreans.
At the heart of the JSA is the border line between North and
South, which at one point reduces to a marking drawn on the ground.
Both sides of the line are continuously patrolled by soldiers
of the two sides. Parties of foreign tourists have the opportunity
of visiting the border. In the course of one such visit by Americans
and South Koreans, a gust of wind blows the hat of one female
tourist across the dividing line into North Korea. Immediately
soldiers on both sides become tense. For the woman to walk the
two metres across the line to retrieve her hat is out of the question.
The problem is resolved when a North Korean soldier picks up
the hat. While his feet remain firmly on the northern side of
the demarcation line, the camera follows his arm as it crosses
the line and he returns the woman's property. He informs us that
in crossing the line with his arm he was, according to North Korean
military law, committing a punishable offence.
In another memorable scene, South Korean soldiers with the
latest military high-tech equipment are on patrol. They discover
that they have mistakenly strayed into the JSA. Their commander
orders a rapid retreat. One of the South Korean soldiers, Lee,
has separated from the group to relieve himself. As he attempts
to hurriedly return to his patrol he feels a pressure on his boota
trip line attached to a mine. If he takes a step the mine will
be activated, blowing him to smithereens. The sweat runs down
his face as he waits, petrified, in the woods until he is discovered
by a rival patrol of North Koreans.
Instinctively Lee levels his rifle at the three enemy soldiers
and orders them to leave or he will shoot. They turn on their
heels to go but he calls them backthey are, after all, his
only chance of rescue. They dismantle the trip-wire and the incident
becomes the first step in a process of fraternisation between
Lee and the North Korean trio. Over time both sides come to realise
that the Cold War fiends of official propaganda, North
and South, are simply human beings with similar aims, desires
and expectations.
In her investigation to find out what has really taken place,
Lt. Jean confronts a wall of official obstruction. Neither of
the two Korean political establishments is interested in helping
uncover details of an incident that might lead to an easing of
tensions between North and South.
The director of the film, Park Chan Wook, is 37 years old and
studied philosophy at Sogang University before going on to make
films. His films prior to Joint Security Area include Moon
is the Sun's Dream (1992) and The Threesome (1997).
In the notes to his new film the director writes that he wants
to examine the issue of the division of Korea from the standpoint
of a new generation. He writes that the division of the country
is not a tragedy, it is ironic. He goes on to say
that his aim is to expose the system of double-talking about
maintaining peace on both sides, and that he hopes to
show with his film how ideologies drive people into catastrophe.
Such views have a familiar ring. In much university philosophy
and current schools of thought, it is popular to brusquely damn
all ideologies, i.e., all expansive theories dealing
with the development of society. The evidence usually given to
demonstrate the illegitimacy of ideologies is the
series of wars and catastrophes that occurred in the twentieth
century. In fact, the general condemnation of ideology
by postmodernists, adherents of the Frankfurt School and others
is almost invariably bound up with a stubborn avoidance, or refusal,
to undertake a concrete examination of the historical experiences
of the last century.
Park Chan Wook denies that the division of Korea was a tragedy,
but how else can you characterise a war which ended in 1953 with
the loss of over one million Korean lives, leading to the transformation
of both halves of the country into military camps? It is, moreover,
a historical distortion to mechanically equate the regime in the
South with that in the North. The former was from its origins
a puppet of Western imperialism, while the latter was bound up
with a revolutionary upsurge of the oppressed masses against colonial
rule. This historical fact, however, does not constitute an apology
for the despotic and corrupt ruling elite in the North, which,
like its Maoist mentors in China, has provided the world with
another example of the reactionary and anti-Marxist essence of
petty-bourgeois nationalism in the guise of peasant socialism.
For a half a century millions of Koreans have been prevented
access to members of their own families by a border maintained
by the two largest armies in the world. Some 37,000 US troops
are still stationed in the south. Following the collapse of the
Soviet Union, the Stalinist North has been left increasingly isolated
and, after decades of sanctions initiated by the US, confronts
widespread famine. Is this merely ironic?
I was able to speak to the director after the showing of his
film and he conceded his own uncertainty concerning the way forward
in the process of reconciliation. Politically, he places his trust
in the form of reunification currently being proposed by the South
Korean government of Kim Dae Jung. I reminded him of the devastating
consequences of capitalist restoration for East Germany and the
rest of the former Stalinist eastern bloc, and asked about his
view with regard to the current negotiations for a reconciliation
between the North and South of Korea. He expressed his own reservations
about a rapid capitalist take-over of the North, and said that
in his view there would have to remain some sort of divide over
a long period between the two halves of the country.
The enthusiastic public reaction to Park Chan Wook's new film
is understandable in the sense that he has raised issues that
have been suppressed for decades in the South. At the same time,
due to the limitations of his political outlook and his unwillingness
to make a historical analysis of the situation in his country,
Park Chan Wook has made a film that, wittingly or not, buttresses
the South Korean government's plans to open up the North as a
cheap market for big business.
See Also:
The 1999 Toronto
International Film Festival
Films from Taiwan and China
[2 October 1999]
51st Berlinale: Part
1
A miserable gruel: European films at this year's Berlin Film Festival
[22 February 2001]
The 51st Berlinale:
Part 2
More works from the Berlin film festival
[24 February 2001]
The 51st Berlinale: Part 3
Unresolved historical questions
German feature and documentary films at the Berlin Film Festival
[1 March 2001]
The 51st Berlinale: Part 4
Revealing old and enduring horrors
Spiegelgrund by Angelika Schuster and Tristan Sindelgruber
[3 March 2001]
An interview with Angelika Schuster and
Tristan Sindelgruber, the directors of Spiegelgrund
[3 March 2001]
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