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A D V E R T I S E M E N T
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Chen's new China In his latest film,
Chen explores contemporary culture, music
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united
artists |
Chen Kaige directs a scene from his
latest film, “Together.” |
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| By Howard
Ho DAILY BRUIN SENIOR
STAFF hho@media.ucla.edu
Director Chen Kaige is known for
making films from the safe vantage point of history, but he's ready
for a change.
"I used to believe there was no culture in
China because the old traditional cultural values were being
destroyed by the last 15 years under communism," Chen said. "Now I
feel like I was wrong, and I should pay attention to the social
change in Chinese society."
His latest film "Together" takes
place in contemporary Beijing, a metropolis bustling with cutthroat
competition and capitalist indulgence. The film opens Friday. It's a
far cry from his last film, the historical epic "The Emperor and the
Assassin," or his most well-known film, the Oscar-nominated survey
of 20th century China, "Farewell My Concubine." You can't
necessarily blame Chen for receding to the past; films that
blatantly criticize the current regime are often too easily
censored.
Now Chen has found a topic palatable to the
Chinese government: the soullessness of capitalism. This theme is
also seen in the recent film "Beijing Bicycle," by Wang Xiaoshuai.
"In the past, people lived in fear because they were afraid
to be kicked out of their society," Chen said. "Now they're still
living in fear because they're afraid to be living in poverty."
"Together" follows a violin prodigy and his father from
their provincial country home to the big city to seek a music
teacher. Reflecting the vogue of Western classical music among the
Chinese intelligentsia, Chen's film also captures his love for the
music. Records were smashed during the Chinese Cultural Revolution,
but Chen and his friends hid copies of Beethoven's Pastoral symphony
and Dvorak's Symphony from the New World.
"One day, we got
together, locked the door in the dark, and listened to the music,"
Chen said. "That's a romantic moment in my life."
You can
see the love for music in the way the musical sequences are shot
with glowing light, briskly fluid camera work and, of course,
booming music. To prepare for the final sequence, Chen listened to
Tchaikovsky's Violin Concerto over a hundred times.
Chen
himself appears in the film as a stern but successful violin
teacher. He keeps his students in greedy opposition for the prized
spot in a competition. Though the Chinese government wanted the
teacher to be nicer, Chen kept him an abusive, fame-oriented man.
"Now, many use music and art in China as a key to success
only," Chen said. "The star-maker professor doesn't understand music
at all. How sad is that?"
But this attitude remains
prevalent. When "Together" was screened for young musicians and
their parents, the parents preferred the rough professor while the
youth preferred the gentler, spiritually holistic teacher in the
film.
While "Together" criticizes contemporary attitudes,
Chen's first film, "Yellow Earth," was a call for Chinese society to
modernize. It's just another way Chen has changed.
"On the
one hand I realized nobody can stop the process of modernization.
But on the other hand, we should try to avoid the mistakes made by
other cultures when they developed their own societies," Chen said.
"Now, through this film, I want to tell people how important
it is to keep our ties and contact with each other," Chen added. "We
are losing something we used to
believe."
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