VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,8/10
1877
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Un maldestro allevatore di maiali, un esuberante proprietario di un salone, un cameriere sensibile, un architetto espatriato e una ricca ragazza disincantata convergono e si scontrano mentre... Leggi tuttoUn maldestro allevatore di maiali, un esuberante proprietario di un salone, un cameriere sensibile, un architetto espatriato e una ricca ragazza disincantata convergono e si scontrano mentre migliaia di maiali morti galleggiano nel fiume.Un maldestro allevatore di maiali, un esuberante proprietario di un salone, un cameriere sensibile, un architetto espatriato e una ricca ragazza disincantata convergono e si scontrano mentre migliaia di maiali morti galleggiano nel fiume.
- Premi
- 8 vittorie e 9 candidature totali
Haoyu Yang
- Old Wang
- (as Yang Haoyu)
Archibald C. McColl IV
- Phil Johnson
- (as Archibald Cowan McColl)
Mengchun Sun
- May
- (as Sun Mengchun)
Yuanyuan Xue
- Watermelon Vendor
- (as Xue Yuanyuan)
Recensioni in evidenza
As far as I can tell, she plays an inconsequential role, briefly shoehorned in and without much connection to the plot. Bizarre.
Anyway, as to the main core cast, there's quite a variety of mood and styles in this cautionary tale of ultra-capitalism; I suspect I was supposed to find more of it funny than I did (e.g. The father?) but Vivian Wu pulls it together as Candy with quite a nuanced performance in the (fairly ridiculous) circumstances. The young romance is OK also.
I'm not sure what I'm supposed to make of the ending though - "loose ends" doesn't even begin to cover it!
Worth a look nevertheless.
Anyway, as to the main core cast, there's quite a variety of mood and styles in this cautionary tale of ultra-capitalism; I suspect I was supposed to find more of it funny than I did (e.g. The father?) but Vivian Wu pulls it together as Candy with quite a nuanced performance in the (fairly ridiculous) circumstances. The young romance is OK also.
I'm not sure what I'm supposed to make of the ending though - "loose ends" doesn't even begin to cover it!
Worth a look nevertheless.
This is one of those movies dealing with the effects of capitalism, as if they were essentially some sort of a Chinese thing. There seems always money available to fund a movie that deals with commodification, estrangement and deracination, even exploration and criminality in China, an established relocation of Western middle class anxieties. Dead Pigs, as part of this agenda, is mostly watchable, with truly compelling cinematography and a splendid performance by Vivian Wu and Yang Haoyu. The screenplay nevertheless left me skeptical. There are some nice absurdities in it and there is a unsettling colonial vibe with some white models in a theme park housing complex. Nevertheless the main characters' background were unconvincingly cobbled together and the author doesn't seem to take their misery all too seriously. I had some issues with the gleefully soundtrack, a vexing contrast to the perceptive camera, underlining Yan's willingness to change instantly from depression to irony, culminating in the scene with the excavator with its surreal turn, after which the movie came to a conciliable, even optimistic end. But then during closing credits you see dead ducks floating in the river, accompanied by a bittersweet pop song, the very same the crowd chanted in front of the excevator, a last indication of the director's waywardness (I probably didn't get the symbolic message).
A pig farmer, a beauty salon owner, a young waiter, a wealthy girl and an architect share adventures when thousands of dead pigs appear in Shanghai's central river. Based on true events (in 2013, 16,000 pigs were found in the Huangpu River, infected with PCV), this film marks the debut of Cathy Yan as a director, who 2 years later (2020), makes herself known to the western world with Birds of Prey. The characters are excellent examples of the personification of various problems in modern societies, such as the lack of empathy, ambition, fear of facing reality or the social economic gap between classes. There's a clear western view on the narrative, so that the public can identify itself with the story, but it is still a very interesting set of ideas, and a kind of wake-up call for the Chinese boom at a global level.
I watched this film on a transatlantic flight having never heard of it before and choosing solely based on having heard the director being in charge of the upcoming DCEU venture. Overall, it paints a satirical picture of Chinese society, though you can't help feeling that the generic nature of the stories comments on societal paradigms globally. Certainly, many of the situations, actions and reactions would be quite commonplace in India.
The cinematography was so amazing I felt annoyed watching it on a small screen, and the over the top acting was befitting the satirical nature of the piece. The recurring motifs of contamination and destruction really hit home, while carefully not banging you over the head with their message.
If you can seek it out, definitely worth a watch
As a local Shanghainese, this film perhaps means a little more to me than others. Dead Pigs is more about the city than any characters, it is a biopsy on one of the fastest growing and changing cities in the World, and what it opens is a group of really interesting characters who represent each sectors of Shanghai society relatively well while also painting a picture of how the city affects these people both mentally and physically. Cathy Yan does a great job at constructing these societal issues into her film, but unfortunately while the formula is right, the ingredients feels forced. The biggest issue of all is the casting of Mason Lee who is very obviously an ABC and simply does not fit in the film. The film might work better for a Western oriented audience as it does feel disconnected from local culture (even though it does address societal issues very well, but feels very much through Western lenses), but at the same time Western audience would certainly have trouble understanding the nuisances which places the film in an awkward conundrum. Nevertheless, the film explores unique issues and documents a very unique period of city development of my hometown.
Lo sapevi?
- Colonne sonoreI Only Care About You (Wo zhi zai hu ni)
Written by Toyohisa Araki and Takashi Miki
Lyrics by Shen Chih (Shen Zhi)
Performed by Ya Han Chang
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Dettagli
Botteghino
- Lordo in tutto il mondo
- 4409 USD
- Tempo di esecuzione2 ore 2 minuti
- Colore
- Proporzioni
- 2.68:1
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