New Year movies
01-16 14:29 Caijing![]() |
1. The New Year’s Gift (压岁钱)*
Dir Zhang Shichuan, China
1937
A black and white classic from the 1930s, this endearing slice
of Shanghai cinema tried to break through class boundaries by using the spirit
of Chinese New Year. The plot is simple: a New Year’s coin (yasuiqian), usually
given by the eldest member of the family to the youngest as a gift, gets passed
around characters of different social standing in Shanghai, each one forming a
part of the story. Nowadays, a yasuiqian doesn’t come in coin form anymore, but
rather a cool 100RMB bill. Sometimes we miss the good old days.
2.
The Spring Festival (过年)*
Dir Huang Jianzhong, China
1991
Set in a bleak, snowy village in northeastern China, The
Spring Festival takes places on the cusp of China’s economic boom. It tells the
story of an elderly couple spending the break with their returning children,
each of whom are either too troubled or too busy to be in the mood for a family
reunion. The film sees early turns from some of China’s movie nobility,
including Beijing’s own Ge You, Li Baotian and the late Zhao Lirong. Their
impressive performances and the film’s vivid reflection of modernity meets
tradition makes this one of the hidden gems of Chinese cinema.
3.
Last Train Home (归途列车)*
Dir Fan Lixin, Canada/China/UK
2009
This powerful documentary revolves around a young couple, the
Zhangs, and their journey home alongside the millions of other migrant workers
doing exactly the same during the annual Spring Festival migration (chunyun).
The family travel from Guangzhou to their native village in Sichuan province,
but unlike other films on this subject, director Fan Lixin widens his lens to
encompass a broader social spectrum. Along the way, he brings in the stories of
other factory workers, giving a face to a people who are more than just the
backbone of the ‘Made in China’ powerhouse. Instead of pointing towards the
‘better future’ that one might have expected, Fan leaves a lot of his subjects’
stories unfinished, leaving it open to the audience to fill in the blanks in
what is one of the more poignant films on this list.
4. Return
Ticket (到阜阳六百里)
Dir Teng Yung-Shing, Taiwan/China
2011
Set in contemporary Shanghai, Teng Yung-Shing’s second
directorial feature brings to life a simple human story of an outsider in a big
city. In the film, bankrupted clothing entrepreneur Cao Li (Qin Hailu) teams up
with her fellow Anhui natives to turn an old vehicle into a coach bus. The idea
is to sell tickets to transport migrant workers back to her hometown of Fuyang,
which lies just 300km away (considered a comparatively short journey in chunyun
terms), for Chinese New Year. The film questions the idea of ‘home’ and shows
off Shanghai’s colonial architecture beautifully along the way, but its star
turn is the impressive performance of lead actress Qin Hailu, who also co-wrote
the script.
5. Seventeen Years (过年回家)*
Dir Zhang
Yuan, China 2000
Known for his 1993 quasi-documentary Beijing
Bastards (charting the capital’s early rock scene) and 1997 queer classic East
Palace, West Palace, Zhang Yuan has long been a leading light in China’s first
generation of indie filmmakers, as well as a perpetual fly in the ointment for
the censors. Seventeen Years, on the other hand, sees the director go ‘soft’,
telling a story of forgiveness. The film begins by travelling back in time with
the marriage of two divorcees, each with a daughter of their own. The children,
Xiaolan and Xiaoqin, constantly squabble, leading to an incident where Xiaolan
hits her stepsister over the head, only for Xiaoqin to collapse and die.
Guilt-ridden, young Xiaolan is sentenced to jail, only to return seventeen years
later (now played by Li Bingbing in her big-screen debut) on compassionate leave
for Chinese New Year and in search of her parents’ forgiveness. A truly moving
piece of cinema.
6. Lost On Journey (人在囧途)
Dir
Raymond Yip Wai-Man, China 2010
Another chunyun film, but a rarity
on this list because, for once, it is not a bleak drama tugging on the social
conscience of ‘new money’ China, but a comedy. Heading back home for Chinese New
Year (and to divorce his wife), a wealthy businessman has his journey ruined
when he accidentally joins forces with a stranger (think of it as a Chinese
versionof Planes, Trains and Automobiles). Everything that could possibly go
wrong does go wrong, and they have to race home on any transportation they can
get.
7. Perpetual Motion (无穷动)*
Dir Ning Ying,
China 2005
Known for her classic drama Beijing Trilogy, Ning Ying’s
realistic depiction of life in the capital has always been unique among Chinese
filmmakers. This effort stars four successful women (including entrepreneur and
former Time Out Beijing owner Hung Huang), who arguably play themselves. Expect
some funny lines and harsh satire as Ning delves into the subjects of midlife
crisis, chauvinism and feminism through the story of four old friends gathering
on the eve of Chinese New Year.
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