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IMDbPro

Center Stage

Original title: Ruan Lingyu
  • 1991
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 6m
IMDb RATING
7.4/10
3K
YOUR RATING
Maggie Cheung in Center Stage (1991)
TragedyBiographyDramaRomance

Biopic of 1930s Chinese actress Lingyu Ruan.Biopic of 1930s Chinese actress Lingyu Ruan.Biopic of 1930s Chinese actress Lingyu Ruan.

  • Director
    • Stanley Kwan
  • Writers
    • Peggy Chiao
    • Kang-Chien Chiu
  • Stars
    • Maggie Cheung
    • Chin Han
    • Tony Ka Fai Leung
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.4/10
    3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Stanley Kwan
    • Writers
      • Peggy Chiao
      • Kang-Chien Chiu
    • Stars
      • Maggie Cheung
      • Chin Han
      • Tony Ka Fai Leung
    • 16User reviews
    • 23Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 12 wins & 14 nominations total

    Photos60

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    Top cast21

    Edit
    Maggie Cheung
    Maggie Cheung
    • Ruan Ling-yu…
    Chin Han
    Chin Han
    • Tang Chi-Shan
    • (as Han Chin)
    • …
    Tony Ka Fai Leung
    Tony Ka Fai Leung
    • Tsai Chu-sheng…
    Carina Lau
    Carina Lau
    • Lily Li…
    Waise Lee
    Waise Lee
    • Li Min-wei
    Li-li Li
    • Self
    • (as Lily Li)
    Lawrence Ng
    Lawrence Ng
    • Chang Ta-Min…
    Cecilia Yip
    Cecilia Yip
    • Lin Chu-Chu
    Kelvin Wong
    Kelvin Wong
    • Nier Erh
    San Yip
    • Ms Liu
    Paul Chang Chung
    Paul Chang Chung
    • Boss of Lianhua
    • (as Paul Chang)
    Yanyan Chen
    Yanyan Chen
    • Self - Interview
    Lingyu Ruan
    Lingyu Ruan
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    Daisy Tian Dai
    • Hsiao-Yu (3 years)
    Ta-Nan Huang
    Stanley Kwan
    Stanley Kwan
    • Self
    Hengzhi Fu
    Yu Sun
    • Self - Interview
    • Director
      • Stanley Kwan
    • Writers
      • Peggy Chiao
      • Kang-Chien Chiu
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    7.42.9K
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    Featured reviews

    8wickest

    Baby steps for Maggie Cheung/an innovative vision of the cinema for Stanley Kwan

    The experience of watching this film in 2006 has been similar to watching Marilyn Monroe in "Don't Bother to Knock" after having seen her later, greater performances. Maggie Cheung's (Garbo-like) capability to release interior emotion that will later haunt viewers in "In the Mood for Love" is beginning to take root in "Yuen Ling-yuk." Later on, Wong Kar Wai was able to use editing to sculpt her performance into consistent, unrelenting intensity. Here she is just beginning to explore the boundaries of her talent. This fits in with director Stanley Kwan's need to create a work in progress, like the productions we watch as they are filmed. He both exploits and denounces the artificial milieu as the actors slip in and out of their roles and the film steps in and out of period. The trial-and-error method of Yuen Ling-yuk is matched by Kwan's letting Cheung find her way through the moods of the character, as if she were trying on a different mask for each moment of the life she is embodying. By 2000 the integration of facial and corporal expressions into dramatic expression would be seamless.

    It would be interesting to know which directors saw this film when it was shown on the festival circuit. Did Tim Burton know that he had a Chinese counterpart who also let his affection for a forgotten era in cinema guide the pace (disconcerting for many) of his tribute when he made "Ed Wood" a year later? In 1999 when Benoît Jacquot filmed "La Tosca," did he think of this film for his distancing technique that juxtaposed real singers at a recording session filmed in black-and-white with their operatic characters in colorful period costumes? Perhaps even Scorsese took inspiration for "Aviator" from the 1930s shadowy wood-paneling/glossy brilliantine look that comes much more easily to Kwan.

    This film can be placed alongside "Sylvia Scarlett" or "The Unbearable Lightness of Being," wherein young actresses were given the freedom to go beyond what they had done before and reach for what they would do, under the guidance of a director whose search to take the viewer into (then) uncharted waters inspired the performers to deepen their potential.
    6Classic-Movie-Club

    A mixed bag

    This story of a young beautiful acclaimed actress from the 30s could have been so much more. Unfortunately it is a bit of an overlong mess which mixes a somewhat boring documentary approach with 90s interviews and vintage reels, with a rather gripping and stylish account of love, society bias and deceit. Had to fight not to fall asleep during the dull moments
    7ron-chow

    An Interesting depiction of life of an actress in the bygone days

    I stumbled on a DVD copy of the film from the local library, but before that I never heard of this film. Stanley Kwan also directed Rouge, a film I enjoyed and liked very much, and that prompted my decision to make the time investment to watch it.

    Center Stage, aka Yuen Ling-Yuk (Cantonese pronunciation of the main character) or Ruan Ling-Yu (the mandarin equivalent) is a slow film, a period piece focused on the life and premature death of an actress in the 30's in China. As a kid growing up in Asia several decades ago I never watched B/W silent films, so Yuen was never known to me, until now.

    It was a slow film, but well acted and researched. I enjoyed the depiction of Shanghai in the 30's and the personification of various people in the entertainment circle. This film is obviously not for everyone. For the selected few with the interest or the cultural background, it is a film worth watching. If nothing else, it is a cultural lesson on the filming business and a snapshot of the Chinese society in 1930. Seeing some big name actors in it, doing what they do best, is a bonus.
    8chadstep

    beautiful picture of 1930's Chinese movie industry

    I'm a novice at Chinese history, especially in the area of periods of film, and, being American, I'm particularly fascinated by it and comparing it to period pieces set in the 1930's US (a la "Cat's Meow" or "Miller's Crossing"). I was particularly taken with Centre Stage's attention to detail in period dress, music, and movie deal-making among the industry. As opposed to American movies focusing of stars/starlets' merciless climb to the top of the industry, Maggie Cheung plays Ruan as a kind, clever, and talented actress whose versatility and assertiveness helps her move beyond pigeonholing by the industry to play a wide range of parts--revolutionary, new woman, peasant-girl.

    One part it seems which has been overlooked in the few reviews I've read is how this image of feminism illustrates China's version of liberation. Cheung plays Ruan as both a feminist in charge of her career, as well as a woman who is in control of her scandalous affair with Lawrence Ng's character. The difference between her and him being that men are understood to have concubines and are forgiven for the indecency, while Maggie's career is ruined (though she never apologizes for it in any way). Traditional roles still trump profession in 1930's China, but the sadness of it all being retold shows a strong Ruan overcoming every possible trap--losing a career over an affair, especially--and maintaining her desires for success.

    For Cheung's performance, it never wavered. I was a big fan of hers in "Irma Vep" and she was just a strong in this role playing Ruan. Effortless shifts between emotion ("So, you're showing me your true face," her lover says as she blows smoke in his face obstinately, then switches to a kindly-wife smile--is she practicing her role in the movie, or is that really her?), graceful poise courtesy of the era before slouching was cool, private display of emotion, and elegant role-play as mistress and ex-wife with Tony Leung.

    I'd have to know more about the history of Ruan to know if this is an accurate portrayal of her life, but the film-making style of inter-cutting Cheung playing her in the 30's while interviews with Ruan's colleagues from that time as they are interviewed by the director of the movie is a fascinating way to present her history. Is it a bio-pic? Is it a historical fiction? Is it a retrospective? It's all and more.
    donleavy

    Classic story of patriarchal double standard

    A biopic of Chinese silent film actress from the 30's, Ruan Lingyu, with Maggie Cheung as Ruan. This movie tells the sad story of a young woman who is rescued from poverty by show business, and is subsequently destroyed by it. It's a classic story of the patriarchal double standard in which an adulterous woman is punished by society while an adulterous man is not.

    Maggie Cheung's performance is quite good. First of all, she pulls off being an actress playing an actress who is very immersed in her work.

    Everyone in this movie is exceedingly composed - they speak carefully, and walk perpetually as if on eggshells. No one really comes alive until a scene at a dance hall near the end. But despite all the sugary politeness, Cheung successfully conveys a woman who is being slowly destroyed by her oppressive environment. And there are a couple scenes in which she completely loses it, and it's very affecting to watch.

    The movie is very interestingly interspersed with clips from Ruan's movies, documentary footage of Ruan's surviving contemporaries, and the actors' conversations with the director.

    The other actors, such as Tony Leung Ka Fai, Carina Lau, and Waise Lee, who are so interesting in other movies, all have little to nothing to do, except to look nice in period costume.

    Also interesting is the fact that Carina Lau (who plays fellow actress Lily Li) looks much more like the real Ruan Lingyu than Maggie Cheung does.

    Watching this film is a bit like watching a PBS documentary - edifying, educational, but not exactly fun.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      With her win for Best Actress at the 1992 Berlin Film Festival, Maggie Cheung became the first Chinese actor to win a major European film award.
    • Connections
      Featured in Century of Cinema: Naamsaang-neuiseung (1996)
    • Soundtracks
      Buried My Heart
      Music by Johnny Chen

      Lyrics by Daryl Yao

      Performed by Tracy Huang

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    FAQ14

    • How long is Center Stage?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • December 1, 1999 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Hong Kong
    • Languages
      • Cantonese
      • Mandarin
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Ruan Ling-Yu
    • Filming locations
      • China
    • Production companies
      • Golden Harvest Company
      • Golden Way Films Ltd.
      • Paragon Films Ltd.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 6 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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