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Suzhou River

Suzhou River (2000)

April. 04,2000
|
7.4
| Drama Romance

After getting out of prison, small-time crook Mardar stumbles upon a woman who looks exactly like his long-lost lover.

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Reviews

ChanFamous
2000/04/04

I wanted to like it more than I actually did... But much of the humor totally escaped me and I walked out only mildly impressed.

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Ezmae Chang
2000/04/05

This is a small, humorous movie in some ways, but it has a huge heart. What a nice experience.

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Juana
2000/04/06

what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.

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Guillelmina
2000/04/07

The film's masterful storytelling did its job. The message was clear. No need to overdo.

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Arta Barzanji
2000/04/08

The film starts with a black screen with voice over of two lovers talking to each other which, to some extent, reminded me of the opening scene of Hiroshima Mon Amour (1959). The black screen gradually turns into dirty water of Suzhou River, a tracking shot from a boat shows us the old industrial buildings around the river, people, ships and the filthy river (as the narrator calls it) itself. Cold colors like blue and green are most obvious ones in this sequence but grey is dominating the whole scene, perhaps emphasizing on filthiness of the river. The scene is shot with a hand-held camera but we are not seeing through the narrator's eyes, we are seeing through his own camera, and it's differentiated from his own POV shots (that we will see a lot later in the film) through the use of zoom and jerky turns and sudden cuts in this scene. This is not a movie with linear storyline and this is a different time line from the prologue conversation, it's the latest and the current time line of the film, and all others are prior to it. We even hear the ending of the movie in the beginning from the narrator: "I saw bodies of two lovers being dragged near the river by the police." After the movie title comes up the narrator starts introducing himself to us through his own voice and eyes, now we have POV shots from the narrator himself. He uses past tense verbs so it's clear that we are again in a different time line from the previous scene. Also in the bar, we don't see everything the boss tells the narrator because of multiple jump cuts and finally he tells us himself that the guy wanted him to shoot his mermaid show. And this is the standard of the movie in early scenes; we don't usually hear characters talking, instead the narrator tells us what they said. The narrator goes on in the same time line to meet Meimei, the "mermaid". Here there are information that will make us confused later on about Meimei's real identity like that the narrator didn't know anything about her past, that she suddenly disappeared for days and that she was a "mermaid". As the narrator is telling us about Mardar and looking out of his apartment's window, we see a girl with ponytails and a guy on a motorcycle among the crowd and then there is a cut to medium shot of the guy on the bike, who is Mardar and that was the transition between two different time lines. The camera isn't the narrator's POV shot anymore and we begin to hear him less and less in the following parts. There is a shot in Mardar's back story where we slowly zoom in to a light bulb in his room and then cut to a sunny exterior shot which resembles of the iconic match to sun cut in Lawrence of Arabia (1962). As Moudan enters the story, there are some changes in cinematography; the camera gradually comes off-hand and goes on tripod, we start to see shots where camera is placed behind Mardar's shoulder whenever he is following Moudan (or in a later scene Meimei). When Moudan and Mardar are riding on the bike, we see them from the front; they can't see each other but we see both their face Moudan is happy and cheerful and we get a close-up to emphasize that in her face but Mardar seems emotionless! This kind of staging and camera position happens again with Moudan and Mardar at his apartment and also with Mardar and the criminal woman. We are used to seeing Mardar and Moudan close together when they are in a shot; either riding on his bike or cuddling at his apartment so it stands out when they are each on one end of the frame in a long shot where Mardar is taking her as a hostage to get money from her father. Their emotional distance is conveyed through their physical distance in this scene. Later parts of the film the camera goes hand-held again and we have the narrator's POV shots again, the narrator who is supposedly the only one left from the film. Interior shots are usually full of yellow, either yellowish props or a yellow beam of light. Also the night scene with Mardar Meimei and Mardar is unusually blue but still has yellowish interiors. Exteriors (which are almost all around the river) have pale, grayish colors with low contrast and foggy weather (that causes a strong aerial perspective) probably caused by fumes of the industrial buildings surrounding the river. This overall setting gives the exterior shots a sick and somber feeling that reminds of that of the opening shots of Red Desert (1964). Also Mardar's obsession with Moudan and similarities of Moudan and Meimei reminded me of Vertigo (1958).

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herrpasz
2000/04/09

Well the story is pretty simple but it is not the case, what i found the most important is that this is in my opinion the best movie about love. And not such love as in middle ages or fantasy worlds, not from the XIX century but the one the appears in present day. In this dirty and poor environment of suzhou river we are given chance to believe that true love is not one that vanish but the one that last. It is a must to seeNot everyone may like the acting, cause Asians always seem to be a little bit introvert but in the end i assure you, you will cry your eyes out"if i would disappear would you look for me?yes Would you look for me forever?yesYour whole life?yesYou are a liar..."

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skilsby
2000/04/10

"Suzhou River" is set in an off beat and low key Shanghai, unrecognisable as the Chinese city of bright lights. Shot from the perspective of an unseen narrator, Li Jiqian, "Suzhou He" toys wonderfully with the identity of its characters in a city filled to over flowing. Ma Da, a motor cycle courier is looking for Peony (Xun Zhou) a girl he lost years earlier. Has he found her in Meimei? Meimei asks "Am I the Peony your looking for?", half hopeful, half mocking. A pivotal moment in self awareness in a society held together for so long by conformity.Hand held camera work, shot, it seems, mainly in natural light sets "Suzhou He" apart from many recent Chinese films released in the West, especially the beautiful, luminous films of the 'Fifth Generation' film makers so popular outside China. An interesting and arresting look at love, life and relationships of a new generation in China.

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Owen Christopher Keenan
2000/04/11

This was an original story well directed, great acting amongst a bleak city landscape. It's hard to do an original love story without making it sentimental, but like Wong Kar wai they manage it.Perhaps it's something Chinese but at the moment they are creating emotionally satisfying, poignant and poetic romances. Western film-makers could take note. In The Mood for Love - the best foreign film I've seen this year

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