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Please Vote for Me

  • 2007
  • Not Rated
  • 58m
IMDb RATING
7.9/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
Please Vote for Me (2007)
Documentary

Democracy in China exists, that is, in a primary school in Wuhan where a grade 3 class can vote who they want as class monitor.Democracy in China exists, that is, in a primary school in Wuhan where a grade 3 class can vote who they want as class monitor.Democracy in China exists, that is, in a primary school in Wuhan where a grade 3 class can vote who they want as class monitor.

  • Director
    • Weijun Chen
  • Stars
    • Cheng Cheng
    • Luo Lei
    • Xu Xiaofei
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.9/10
    1.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Weijun Chen
    • Stars
      • Cheng Cheng
      • Luo Lei
      • Xu Xiaofei
    • 18User reviews
    • 10Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 3 nominations total

    Photos3

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    Top cast3

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    Cheng Cheng
    • Self
    Luo Lei
    • Self
    Xu Xiaofei
    • Self
    • Director
      • Weijun Chen
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    7.91.4K
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    Featured reviews

    1thomasmorus

    Fiction or documentary?

    This can't be a documentary, as another reviewer already said. For starters, there are many "intimate" moments caught on tape in the most unrealistic way (e.g., a kid telling his machiavellic plans to destroy another candidate's reputation - all steps of his planning and executing are recorded), the camera shoots sometimes at angles that would be impossible to shoot without the cameraman looking really awkward, the characters fit perfectly well into their roles in the plot (which is odd for a documentary), etc., so this casts serious doubts on whether many of the film's good points are real or fake.

    But as a fiction, is it interesting? Well, more or less, because the main interest in the film is to catch a glimpse at contemporary China, and a fiction destroys this unbiased objective. The film rather reinforces some stereotypes and doesn't show anything new. The novelty would be that the problems of western elections can also happen in China, but this is discarded if the film is a fiction.
    9denisemybarra

    Feel privileged in so many ways!

    This movie provided a once in a lifetime opportunity an insider view of a primary school in China. Better yet, you see what happens when a culture deprived of democracy, and on top of that when children are given the liberty to make a democratic decision! It was such a joy to see how these children interacted with each other & how the families were involved in their campaign. I wish we could show our youth the importance of what is so widely taken for granted in our own country. The spirit of competition was over the top, it was a thrill to see the drive and determination of these youngsters! Enjoy, throughly entertaining!
    8aeflipflopfan42

    A great movie for the whole family!

    "Please Vote For Me"

    The documentary Please Vote For Me was made by Weijun Chen in 2007. This documentary was about a third grade class in China that was given the chance to learn how a democracy really works. The teacher of this class chose three students that would be competing to become the class monitor Cheng Cheng, Xiao Fei, and Luo Lei. Two boys and one girl were chosen as candidates and then told that they could pick two student supporters to help in their campaign. Throughout the film you are able to see the children's lives at home, during class, and while talking strategy with their parents. During the days before the actual election speeches were given on why they should be elected and why their opponent was unfit or too weak to fulfill the job. Also debates were held during class allowing the three to point out each other's flaws in front of an audience. It was interesting to see that through the whole process the children's parents become more and more involved in their child's campaign. At some points the parents were even teaching their kids how to go about tearing others down and how to make the other kids drop out from the competition. In the end one of the little boys ended up being elected after showering the entire class with gifts provided by his father. This movie was an extremely intriguing film about how nine and ten year olds view the idea of democracy.

    The major theme in this documentary was simply to portray how a third grader may see democracy, especially while being raised in a country like China.

    Two of Weijun Chen's most famous works are Please Vote For Me (2007) and The Biggest Chinese Restaurant In The World (2008). The Biggest Chinese Restaurant In The World refers to the inside story of a five thousand seat Chinese restaurant called West Lake. West Lake is located in the Hunan province city of Changsha and is more noted for its extravagant shows that for the food it serves. This owner of this dynamic restaurant having well over three hundred chefs is Mrs. Qin Linzi. Chen may have had some other minor works, but these are his most famous.

    The main subjects in Please Vote For Me were the three children nominated to run for class monitor. Some other important subjects were the families of each candidate and of course the other children within the class. The teacher also played a key role by giving all of the students the guidelines they would need for the project and explained how to go about being elected.

    The type of editing that Chen used was very appealing because it wasn't from an interviewing standpoint. The final product shows you exactly how the kids and everyone else reacted to certain situations without any questioning period. This type of editing in Please Vote For Me gave a smooth, more realistic feeling to the piece. The cinematography of the piece was also very complementing. No major action in the film seemed planned out. The documentary came across simply as whatever happens, happens. The unplanned attitude was most noticeable in parts where the kids said certain things to their parents and fellow students.

    The music wasn't really an issue in this particular documentary because no music had been chosen. If Chen had decided to include some type of music I think a fun, techno mix might have been a good fit.

    The part within the film that was so surprising to me was how involved the parents became in their child's campaign. Sometimes it seemed as though the children were acting more like adults than the actual parents. The documentary Please Vote For Me was a true pleasure to watch and I would recommend it to anyone.
    10zombie_archer

    This documentary itself actually made cases for both pro-democracy and

    Many people don't realize there are village and town level elections in China. I'm fairly certain at least over 90% if not all of the villages and towns have leaders democratically elected. (Note: the government usually don't pick the candidates, but voting fraud happen from time to time from what I heard. Yes, this is what happens when there's a democracy without proper voter education and regulations, most importantly, without a real voting culture. people just buy votes.) Therefore I have no reason to question the authenticity of this documentary. Common, it's an election between three third graders.If you think Chinese government care enough to stage this documentary you are most definitely paranoid.

    This documentary itself actually made cases for both pro-democracy and anti-democracy arguments. On one hand, it's scary to have uneducated voters and unregulated voting process in a democracy; on another hand, without real democracy, the imitation can only be so crude and cruel.
    9iambillycorgan

    money, tears, public speaking, but who pulls the strings?

    As a 25 year old westerner I feel really bad for the sibling-less kids of China post 1979; such an intense, strict and oh so serious upbringing! But it was good to see these kids still know how to have a bit of fun some of the time - alternating between deliberately making people cry - to dancing about like a crazy loon.

    After finishing watching this just now, my first thought was "who produced this?" was it the Chinese government trying to show democracy as a bad/flawed idea, or pro-westerners trying to say "yeah man, you DO need democracy now!"....

    in the end it doesn't really matter as the film can equally discount or credit either argument.

    It is a surprisingly honest and intimate doco; quite cleanly played out (not editorialized). Just like in most elections, the good guy you hope and would really love to see win; gets done over by the political machinations of the more cut=throat dodgier candidate - as is sadly too often the case in real world politics.

    Make a bet with whoever you watch this with in the first 20 minutes as to who you think will win, you might be surprised!

    This had me from the first minute until the last credits rolled, good film, nuff said.

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    Storyline

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 6, 2007 (Canada)
    • Countries of origin
      • China
      • South Africa
      • Denmark
    • Language
      • Mandarin
    • Also known as
      • Проголосуйте за меня
    • Filming locations
      • Evergreen Primary School, Wuhan, China
    • Production companies
      • Steps International
      • ITVS International
      • ARTE
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      58 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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