Art movies are those non-commercial movies
for the sake of arts. In the 1990s, China made fruitful achievements in making
art movies. The representative directors are Zhang Yimou and Chen Kaige, who
have won international awards once and again.
Zhang made a lot of famous movies. Red
Sorghum (1987), which won the Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival and
achieved critical and commercial success, both internationally and domestically.
Red Sorghum crackles with dynamic edits, striking close-ups, and
gorgeously photographed images. Later Zhang made Ju Dou (1989), which won
Best Film at the Chicago Film Festival and garnered an Academy Award nomination.
His next film, Raise the Red Lantern (1992), widely considered his
finest, also concerned a woman married into a controlling, abusive patriarchal
world. Just as critics seemed to have identified a specific Zhang Yimou style,
he released The Story of Qiu Ju (1992), which is about a pregnant peasant
women seeking legal justice after her husband is beaten by a village leader.
The Story of Qiu Ju won the Golden Lion (Best Picture) at the 1992 Venice
Festival. In 1997 he released the comedy Keep Cool, featuring Jiang Wen,
who starred in Red Sorghum. In 1999, his film Not One Less won the
coveted Golden Lion at the 1999 Venice Film Festival. Farewell to My Concubine, a gorgeous melodrama by Zhang Yimou's contemporary
Chen Kaige, also won international film award.
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| A scene from Raise the Red
Lantern
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From the highly acclaimed
director Xie Fei, a film Women from the
Lake of Scented Souls shared the top Golden Bear
Award at the 1993 Berlin International Film Festival.
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| A scene from Women from the Lake
of Scented Soul
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The so-called sixth generation of Chinese
filmmakers refers to a younger wave of makers. The younger filmmakers have
quietly begun to make films that are attracting increasing attention at home and
abroad with explosive creative energy.
Huang Jianxin directs films on the Urban
Generation, who trains their cameras squarely on the everyday reality of
contemporary Chinese city life. His representative films are Stand Straight
and Don't Fall and Back to Back, Face to Face. Zhou Xiaowen, a
director who insists that films should be made in a combination of arts style
and commercial purpose. He made Ermo in 1994, highly acclaimed as a film
of high art value. Young female director Li Shaohong directed Bloody
Morning and The Unpuzzled 40 Age. In 1994 she directed Red
Powder, which was a big success in box office. Sun Zhou, another director,
made Heart Perfume in 1991 and Pretty Mom in 2000, portraying the
public's daily life and indicating traditional spirits.