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the international federation of film critics | |||||||||||||
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Hong Kong 2007
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Wang Fen |
However, I view the director's use of the camera as something special. The magic realism in the movie brings a touch of romance to the old Li Jiang city. The beautiful old buildings and spectacular scenery, unexplored and mysterious, serve as a stage for the primitive and instinctive struggles between urban and rural lifestyles and between the privacy and sharing of the couple. There is an evident theatrical treatment of the subject matter, with the sound, acting, camera movements all accentuating this.
The traditional Chinese percussion music in the film often serves to echo the fluctuations of emotion that Da Shang experiences, as well as generating tension and focusing the audience's attention at key moments. The two actors, Wu Gang and Wu Yujian, are both very experienced. Wu Yujian plays Da Shang's nervous wife with a theatrical acting style that creates a dramatic and impressive performance.
The plot has some interesting twist and turns towards the end. Da Shang's mistress turns out to be a demon, and Da Shang winds up murdering his wife. Then everything in the film turns out to be a dream. Fortunately, the movie does not end there, and in the final post-dream scene, one of Da Shang's neighbors opens his door only to see the very same suitcase floating down the river.
This ending suggests the suitcase is a magical object, and that it can change how people think and even change their fate.
"I think that the world consists of men, women, their needs and relationships. It cannot be just men's stories or women's stories," Wang Fen said. Though the subject of relationships between men and women is a conventional one, it is also undeniably of universal interest. In The Case it also delivered with creativity and meaning.
recent festivals |
Hong Kong 2007
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