IMDb RATING
6.9/10
2.6K
YOUR RATING
After being swindled by her ex-husband, a woman takes on the Chinese legal system.After being swindled by her ex-husband, a woman takes on the Chinese legal system.After being swindled by her ex-husband, a woman takes on the Chinese legal system.
- Awards
- 34 wins & 30 nominations total
Zonghan Li
- Qin Yuhe
- (as Li Zonghan)
Hewei Yu
- Zheng Zhong
- (as Yu Hewei)
Jia-yi Zhang
- Ma Wenbin
- (as Zhang Jiayi)
Yi Zhang
- Jia Congming
- (as Zhang Yi)
Lixin Zhao
- Shi Weimin
- (as Zhao Lixin)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Bingbing Fan is on a quest for justice. She and her husband got a divorce so they could get a better apartment, but after the divorce, he married someone else. So she wants the divorce overturned, so they can be married again, whereupon she will sue for a divorce.
This confuses the local judiciary, the police department and the entire civil government up to the level of provincial governor -- goodness knows, it confused me -- and gets a review at the national level in Beijing, where the decisions are sustained. This happens for ten years in a row, while judges, majors and even governors lose their jobs, because this crazy woman cannot be stopped.
It's a fine satire of the effects of one determined person on a massive bureaucracy, as various people try to deal with her by varying means. While I found several stretches a bit slow, perhaps this is because in the details of general and particular points to make fun of, the particular points of Chinese government elude me. Even with that in mind, there are lots of good laughs, and some interesting playing around with mattes: the provincial scenes are shown through a circular matte, showing off the squarish architecture, and the Beijing scenes are shown through a small, rectangular matte, showing off the round archways. I think this is supposed to emphasize the difference way that local and national governments look at things. If so, it is a very nice conceit.
This confuses the local judiciary, the police department and the entire civil government up to the level of provincial governor -- goodness knows, it confused me -- and gets a review at the national level in Beijing, where the decisions are sustained. This happens for ten years in a row, while judges, majors and even governors lose their jobs, because this crazy woman cannot be stopped.
It's a fine satire of the effects of one determined person on a massive bureaucracy, as various people try to deal with her by varying means. While I found several stretches a bit slow, perhaps this is because in the details of general and particular points to make fun of, the particular points of Chinese government elude me. Even with that in mind, there are lots of good laughs, and some interesting playing around with mattes: the provincial scenes are shown through a circular matte, showing off the squarish architecture, and the Beijing scenes are shown through a small, rectangular matte, showing off the round archways. I think this is supposed to emphasize the difference way that local and national governments look at things. If so, it is a very nice conceit.
I Am Not Madame Bovary (Chinese: Wo Bu Shi Pan Jinlian) (2016)
Director: Xiaogang Feng
First Seen: 1/24/25
6/10 Stars
Wronged gal seeks revenge in circles and rectangles.
Tale that spans decades- side plots, excess characters, much too long and gimmicky!
An underdog tale told with charm, humor, panache, and a poignant end.
One versus corrupt regime, filmed amidst a lush China!
#Somonka #PoemReview
A traditional poem taking two stances in two stanzas. In fact, it's basically two tankas written as two love letters to each other (one tanka per love letter). This form usually demands two authors, but it is possible to have a poet take on two personas.
Wronged gal seeks revenge in circles and rectangles.
Tale that spans decades- side plots, excess characters, much too long and gimmicky!
An underdog tale told with charm, humor, panache, and a poignant end.
One versus corrupt regime, filmed amidst a lush China!
#Somonka #PoemReview
A traditional poem taking two stances in two stanzas. In fact, it's basically two tankas written as two love letters to each other (one tanka per love letter). This form usually demands two authors, but it is possible to have a poet take on two personas.
Cinematography is absolutely stunning in this, justly lengthy, portrayal of a woman's quest to gain justice for a wrong, multiplied several times, by uncaring bureaucracy. It is not until the end that we discover exactly why this woman is determined to revoke and repeat a divorce that everyone else insists is valid. She is cast as the indecent woman, a Madam Bovary, but she most definitely is not. She's not mad either, which is what you and all the other characters in the film are lead to believe. It takes patience to uncover the small piece of missing information that makes sense of all. Patience is richly rewarded in this thoughtful and closely observed film - almost to the extent of forensic examination through a microscope.
Every man is a good actor. But the director is not good enough, especially this kind of novel garbage picture. The story of the whole film is to develop in the direction of black satire, but because of commercial considerations, dare not say very thoroughly. Only Mayor Ma said something about the substance.
This is a fun if somewhat lengthy satirical window (literally) into Chinese bureaucracy and one crazed woman's battle against it.
Full of fun characters and quirky scenes. Fan Bingbing is superb and unrecognisable as the loony but determined hero.
Worth the watch.
Full of fun characters and quirky scenes. Fan Bingbing is superb and unrecognisable as the loony but determined hero.
Worth the watch.
Did you know
- TriviaThe film is presented in four aspect ratios. The majority of the film is in a circular frame, most scenes taking place in Beijing are in a square frame (1:1), one shot of a bus is in widescreen 16:9, and the last scene (including end credits) is in the cinematic 2.39:1 frame.
- Quotes
Leader: A sesame seed has become a watermelon.
[pause]
Leader: An ant has become an elephant.
- How long is I Am Not Madame Bovary?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Toi Khong Phai La Phan Kim Lien
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $436,798
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $181,552
- Nov 20, 2016
- Gross worldwide
- $70,826,207
- Runtime
- 2h 8m(128 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- Circular
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