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7.5/10
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A young woman is kidnapped and sold to a villager in the mountains.A young woman is kidnapped and sold to a villager in the mountains.A young woman is kidnapped and sold to a villager in the mountains.
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I heard about the movie from Leonard(a youtuber) when something happened in Harvest County(I don't dare to tell the name so I translated it), which shares the same event as the plots here.
However the movie is banned in China because it has torn the fig leaf of the dark side.
However the movie is banned in China because it has torn the fig leaf of the dark side.
BLIND MOUNTAIN (dir. Yang Li) Although set in China during the early 1990's, this drama seems completely out of sync with the modern world. A college educated young woman is lured to Northern China with the promise of a well paying job, but she actually has been sold to a village family to become the wife of their eldest son. The villagers would have let her go if she paid back the $7,000 in dowry money that they paid for her, but she has no identification or money, and they are convinced she is only trying to renege on the deal. The authorities were aware of her plight, yet took the side of the villagers. Apparently this is not an isolated incident, and the film implies that there are many such rural Chinese women in the same predicament. Although the subject matter is harrowing, the mountainous terrain where the film was shot is undeniably beautiful. Very much worth a look.
Blind Mountain is an excellent film about a college girl being duped into going into a mountain village and left there "sold" as a bride and her attempts to escape and get back to her family. The plot sounds trite but Yang Li's excellent direction and the crisp editing along with superb performances in the main roles, make this into a twisting horror story and the viewer knows not, where the plot is going.
Apart from the main role of Bai and the teacher, all other actors were actual mountain village people which is startling in the uncompromising look at their culture and the hard lives ingrained into their faces, there are also some real, now rescued, "brides" playing themselves in the film.
Although the film as a good social point to make, it's not preaching or forcing the issues on you but rather asking you to examine the situation. To the villagers, this is just life and it's always been this way, to observers they seem inhumane. Although the film obviously brings up the issue of the one child policy, these villages and bride trafficking have been going one since long before that policy was put into affect and still does in many parts of the world, not just China.
Yang Li was in the audience and took questions at the Hawaii International Film Festival. It was annoying to see the Q&A get hijacked a little by feminists wanting to make a point and answering their own questions but other than that the director was frank and forthcoming about his film.
Excellent. Recommended.
Apart from the main role of Bai and the teacher, all other actors were actual mountain village people which is startling in the uncompromising look at their culture and the hard lives ingrained into their faces, there are also some real, now rescued, "brides" playing themselves in the film.
Although the film as a good social point to make, it's not preaching or forcing the issues on you but rather asking you to examine the situation. To the villagers, this is just life and it's always been this way, to observers they seem inhumane. Although the film obviously brings up the issue of the one child policy, these villages and bride trafficking have been going one since long before that policy was put into affect and still does in many parts of the world, not just China.
Yang Li was in the audience and took questions at the Hawaii International Film Festival. It was annoying to see the Q&A get hijacked a little by feminists wanting to make a point and answering their own questions but other than that the director was frank and forthcoming about his film.
Excellent. Recommended.
And therefore miss some of the nuances, but its a watchable film if you like asian tragedy. its about trading women , whos numbers have decreased after the introduction of the one child per family politics.a boy is much more worth than a girl, and that makes young women, even high educated ones real easy targets to lure and then sell into the rural countryside. it happens all over the planet, but usually its rural girls being sold into the cities .
the film has got some really primitive technical qualities, and the acting are quite stiff at times, but the mains do deliver a credible job to tell this story, though there are some holes in the timeline, and the end is very abrupt. it would have been interesting with a sequel or continuious film made ...... you know when this happens, but the timeline are narrowly told, and where they are would have helped a lot. china is a vast country with hundreds of ''tribes'' and the language,rites and traditions varies a lot. i may say that this is not a hollywood production, neither a norwegian or indiish. its made out of sheer will and poverty, and shall get acknowledgement from me.its recommended
the film has got some really primitive technical qualities, and the acting are quite stiff at times, but the mains do deliver a credible job to tell this story, though there are some holes in the timeline, and the end is very abrupt. it would have been interesting with a sequel or continuious film made ...... you know when this happens, but the timeline are narrowly told, and where they are would have helped a lot. china is a vast country with hundreds of ''tribes'' and the language,rites and traditions varies a lot. i may say that this is not a hollywood production, neither a norwegian or indiish. its made out of sheer will and poverty, and shall get acknowledgement from me.its recommended
In the early 90s, a young woman, Bai Xuemei, a recent college graduate, travels to the countryside of rural Shaanxi province believing she is going to start a job selling medicine to rural peasants. After arriving at remote village, she is drugged and awakes to discover her identity papers have been taken and she is the prisoner of her new 'husband', a contemptuous, uneducated peasant who has bought her for 7000 yuan. Bai protests and tries to leave but is forcibly restrained by her new 'family'. In fact, her new husband's parents assist him in restraining her so that she can be raped. Eventually Bai manages to escape her confinement and flees to inform the local police and is brought to the village chief. He, however, won't help her without proof (identity papers) or a refund of the 7000 yuan and returns her to custody of her would-be-husband. Later Bai meets other prisoner wives who share her fate but have long given up their will to escape. Horrified, as the seriousness of her predicament sinks in, she makes more desperate attempts to escape.
Incredibly enough, the film is based on the real stories of women who were enslaved this way in rural China - the demand for wives brought about by the imbalance of male and female children in the countryside. For once an idyllic, isolated rural Chinese village is portrayed as a place of ignorance and malevolence and a place to escape from. Amazing acting from the cast of non-actors who play themselves very convincingly. The only disappointment might be Bai herself who, as a college graduate, doesn't seem to plan her escape attempts very well.
Incredibly enough, the film is based on the real stories of women who were enslaved this way in rural China - the demand for wives brought about by the imbalance of male and female children in the countryside. For once an idyllic, isolated rural Chinese village is portrayed as a place of ignorance and malevolence and a place to escape from. Amazing acting from the cast of non-actors who play themselves very convincingly. The only disappointment might be Bai herself who, as a college graduate, doesn't seem to plan her escape attempts very well.
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Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $13,164
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $3,676
- Mar 16, 2008
- Gross worldwide
- $43,347
- Runtime
- 1h 35m(95 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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