Raise the Red
Lantern
By
Julien Faddoul
Of all the prominent and praised directors to emerge from
the Fifth Generation of Chinese filmmakers who began making films after the
Cultural Revolution, Zhang Yimou was their champion. After decades of
little-to-no cinematographic information on China, its people or its culture,
the world was blessed with a number of luminous, non-propagandist films,
delivered by a group artists in the 1980s (most of which graduated from the Beijing
Film Academy, class of 1982). Films filled to the brim with bold integrity,
aesthetic ingenuity, a searing beauty, an overwhelming effervescence and, for
the most part, a deep, deep sadness.
Of all these pictures the best of them is Raise the Red Lantern (1991). Zhang
Yimou’s first two features Red Sorghum
(1987) and Ju Dou (1990) are great
films in their own right, but his said third film is his masterwork. He entered
the film industry as a cinematographer and actor. Red Sorghum did two major things for him: it established Zhang
Yimou as a director internationally and it showcased his early mediative manner
for employing strong female protagonists. The film also marked the beginning of
a personal and professional relationship with actress Gong Li that would last
through seven films. Zhang Yimou experienced harsh political hardships with Ju Dou and Raise the Red Lantern when Chinese censors banned both films. After
performing well internationally, and receiving Academy Award nominations, the films
were reinstated by the Chinese government.
Set in the 1920s, Songlian (Gong Li), the
college-educated beauty who arrives at a feudal mansion at the beginning of Raise the Red Lantern, requests that she
lug her own luggage, which is practically the final turn of liberation she will
be allowed throughout the course of the film. Obligated by her stepmother into
what is basically the existence of a concubine, Songlian has settled to become
the fourth wife of a feudal patriarch, a man so imperial that each of his wives
supervises over her own isolated home. While acknowledging the man’s presence,
Zhang Yimou then spends the rest of the film blatantly ignoring him, for this
story is about women. Four women. Reined by intricate sacraments, the wives
spend their time patiently waiting (or not) to be plucked for the night by
their mutual husband, whose ways of deciding include allocating a special foot
massage to the woman he likes best. "If you can manage to have a foot
massage every day, you'll soon be running this household," wife No. 2 (Cao
Cuifeng) tells the new arrival.
For the rest of its running time (128 minutes), Raise the Red Lantern takes on the
episodic nature of a great Chinese novel, or an extravagant American
soap-opera. It is as slow, quiet, and ritualized as the life it depicts. And
needless to say, it ends in tragedy. Most of the movie unfolds in static long
shots that beautifully cover so much emotional ground. On the scarce instances
when the director moves in for the close-up, there's not much action, only
twinkles of countenance dashing athwart the actresses' faces. Yet those faces
hold us with great power, believe me.
Throughout his career Zhang Yimou has always insisted
that “…the objective of any form of art is not political…I am not interested in
politics”. This is a complex ballet of
words, for Raise the Red Lantern is
one of the greatest movies ever made about the politics of power and control.
It traces Songlian's mounting shrewdness once she becomes comfortable to the
censures overriding her fresh life. It ultimately develops into an account of
deceitfulness and treachery in some quarters and solidarity in others, with a
narrative that harvests numerous shocking swings of character and mood.
Songlian learns, among other things, never to believe her first impressions,
and not to lose sight of who her enemies are. In a way, the film is about
having enemies and the testimony that Zhang Yimou is telling us is that most of
us don’t like to admit we have enemies or people who dislike us intensely, but
we all have them, every single one of us, and there’s nothing we can do about
it. The final moments of the film are some of the most beautiful and haunting
as any I have witnessed and Gong Li’s performance is the most gorgeous vision
of tragic wretchedness ever captured on film.
Raise the Red
Lantern is based on a novel called Wives
and Concubines by Su Tong. It is a cool study of sexual irrationality. It
depicts a world where betrayal is the best possible action and transgressing is
the worst. It is maddening, flamboyant, lush, intelligent and always
fascinating. It also possesses a word that I use with great, great care:
integrity. It is great film by a great filmmaker. See it.
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You can see more of Mr. Faddoul's work at http://thecinematouch.blogspot.com.au/ or on twitter @JulienFaddoul
Yay!
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