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Raise the Red Lantern • The Next Reel
"Light the lanterns at the fourth house!"
Despite the bans on some of his earlier films like Ju Dou and Raise the Red Lantern in his home country of China, Zhang Yimou had exploded onto the world stage with these visually sumptuous films and had become a filmmaker worth talking about. Perhaps it was exactly this international presence that kept the Chinese government from suppressing his storytelling further – it gave him the popularity Zhang needed to keep making films. Whether that’s true or not, these early films of his certainly do feel like he has a few things to say about modern China, and it’s perhaps understandable that they’d take offense. Join us – Pete Wright and Andy Nelson – as we continue our Zhang Yimou series with his fourth film, 1991’s Raise the Red Lantern.
We talk about the story and how it could be read as a criticism of modern China, and why we don’t completely buy Zhang when he denies this. We discuss the look of the film – the compositions of the shots, the colors, the camera movement, the set design, the costumes – and how all of it reflects what Zhang is saying with the film. We chat about Gong Li and the rest of the cast, but particularly about Gong and the incredible performance she delivers here. We touch on the customs and traditions depicted in the film and ruminate on the worldbuilding going on here. And we debate the strength of the music – Andy loves it and Pete hates it.
It’s a great film that Andy connects with while Pete felt it dragged on too much, but still allows for a great conversation. Regardless, we agree that it’s a film that must be seen, so check it out then tune in to this week’s show!
Film Sundries
- Watch this film: YouTube
- Original theatrical trailer
- Original poster artwork
- Wives & Concubines by Su Tong (Contained in the collection Raise the Red Lantern: Three Novellas)
- Flickchart
- Letterboxd
Trailers of the Week - Andy's Trailer: The Beguiled — "I remembering finding Don Siegel’s 1971 version of this story very unsettling. Having it retold from not just a woman’s perspective, but from a strong female storyteller like Sofia Coppola, gets me quite excited. I’m thrilled she’s doing this and can’t wait to see it."
- Pete's Trailer: Aftermath — "Arnold’s back! He’s got the brooding beard again, and frankly I thought this was going to be a weird sequel to Maggie. No, this is the true story of a plane crash in 2002 and the hunt for air traffic controller that allowed it to happen. Writer Javier Gullón is behind Enemy and Out of the Dark, both past trailer picks."
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Chapters
- This Is The Next Reel!
- #GuessTheMovie Challenge
- The Blott Spott
- Let's Do Trailers!
- Pete's Trailer — Aftermath
- Andy's Trailer — The Beguiled
- Feature Presentation — Raise the Red Lantern
- Andy runs the numbers
- Flickchart
- Letterboxd
- Amazon giveth...