This review may contain spoilers
The most beautiful declaration of love in world cinematography
Chinese cinema, supported by European critics in the 80s and 90s and by the public in recent years, has been in good health for more than a hundred years.
Chinese cinematography makes about 400 films annually, covering all genres and themes. In its exhibition halls, this production occupies 60 to 70 percent of the projection time.
They also make just over a hundred television series and about 20 cartoons for younger audiences.
The awards from European festivals are repeated, and although the Hollywood Oscar resists, the European and Asian awards are almost never missing.
The development of childhood and adolescence, the daily life of the peasantry and the development of contemporary Chinese society are among the priority themes of the Asian giant's cinematography.
Stories about young people who love, study, work, live and make their way in life are present in the Chinese films of the so-called Sixth Generation.
From the hand of contemporary filmmakers, films such as 'As black as coal' (Báirì Yànhuǒ, Diao Yinan, 2014), 'I am not Madame Bovary' (Wǒ Búshì Pān Jīnlián, Feng Xiaogang, 2016), 'Mrs. Fang' (Fang Xiu Ying, Wang Bing, 2017), 'An Elephant Sitting Still' (Dà Xiàng Xí Dì Ér zuò, Hu Bo, 2018), 'That woman/Ash is the purest white' (Jiang hu er nü, Jia Zhang Ke, 2018), 'Long journey into the night' (Dìqiú zuìhòu de yèwǎn, Bi Gan, 2018), 'Farewell, my son' (dìjiǔtiāncháng, Wang Xiaoshuai, 2019), 'The Wandering Earth' (Liu Lang Di Qiu, Frant Gwo, 2019), among others.
Queer cinema is not far behind, and if in 1996 Zhang Yuan released 'East Palace West Palace', Cu Zi En filmed 'Jiu yue' (2001), Wang Chao released 'Xun Zhao Luo Mai' (Looking for Rohmer), Lu Po-wen presented 'River Knows Fish Heart' (2018), Luo Ye filmed 'Chun feng chen zui de ye wan' ('Spring Fever' / 'Nuit d'ivresse printanière') and Xu Fang Yi exhibited 'Kinematic Theory' and 'The Ambiguous Focus', filmmaker Tang Shi premiered 'Sentimental and Peaceful Today' ('The Raccoon', or 'The Reccoon'), with a script of his own.
Originally conceived as a degree project by professors of Chinese Literature at Peking University, the interest of an increasingly large group of admirers and benefactors made it possible to turn the short film into a feature film.
'The Raccoon' is a faithful reflection of the predominant Chinese personality as a people and culture: interactions that are not warm, although love and affection are still shown. It is part of the formal nature of relationships in Chinese culture.
Gu Xiao An (actor Weng Hai Bin) is a student studying Chinese Literature at a university in Beijing. One night he receives an invitation from his dorm roommates to sleep on the roof of the building to escape the heat. Xiao An lies down, and a friend lies next to him. In the early morning he feels cold, and when he wakes up he notices that his blanket (printed with bears) does not cover him, and next to him a person sleeps with his blanket. He pulls it to get hold of it and, accidentally, touches the erect member of the sleeper, who wakes up and shouts: "It hurts, it hurts". Xiao runs away with the blanket. When he gets to his room he discovers that his friend is sleeping covered with his blanket, so he took the wrong one. He hopes that because it is dark at night, the owner of the blanket has not seen him, but the next morning he is woken up by the owner of the blanket, Mao Cai (actor Wu Di), ready to get his blanket back. The entire misunderstanding is cleared up and when Mao Cai is about to leave, Xiao tells him that he offended, upset, tried to hit someone, and not an apology. Mao Cai invites him to dinner, as an apology. Thus begins a love triangle, as Lao Si (Deng Tian Xiong), another roommate, is in love with Xiao.
Xiao and Mao Cai quickly become close friends. Mao Cai is the first to approach Xiao. He calls her "my wife" to his friends. The friends tell Mao Cai why he dresses so elegantly if his wife lives in the front room and he sees her every day. Students govern relationships in the dorms. There is no presence of any professor or administrative official of the university interfering in the lives of the students.
Xiao sick with jealousy. Moments before he argued with the handsome and slender seme Mao Cai. He is confused by his feelings for him and doesn't want him around. He remembers that Mao Cai, to his question, answered that two years ago, in high school, he was in love with a girl, but they broke up when they graduated. Xiao is sad. Mao Cai is not among the visitors to the hospital, but later, upon returning to his bedroom, he finds out that Mao Cai was the one who picked him up, took him to the hospital, and bought his medicine. This makes him go look for him and they reconnect.
At another point, the cute and sweet Mao Cai tells Xiao that he reminds him of "his brother", who died years ago. He liked bear-printed blankets, he liked the same foods that Xiao likes, and he always walked behind Mao Cai's back, as if he were his shadow, like Xiao walks behind him. "I'm going to sing for you. I'm going to call you my brother". Hugs him. Mao Cai skips his class, and enters Xiao's. He tells him not to write, to play with him. The game consists of reaching under the table and touching the other's penis. A surprised Xiao scolds him. "Are you sick?". The teacher notices. She, the only teacher in the film, is cheerful and positive when she discovers the two boys holding hands in her Chinese Literature class.
Xiao asks him, always on the rooftop where they met and where they meet, why he wants her to call him "brother". And Mao Cai tells him about his parents' divorce when he was a child. He went with his mother to another city, and his younger brother stayed with his father. Xiao now doubts if Mao Cai is in love with him or if he just reminds her of her brother. And, hurt, he distances himself again. This moment is taken advantage of by the thin and passive Lao Si to approach Xiao.
The action is slow, but the film captures the viewer, keeping them interested in the events, often with the need to put a handkerchief close to their eyes. The film takes its time to reach intimacy quickly. It is in the manner of that great Asian and universal filmography that is Chinese: the protagonists meet to talk for hours over a long period. Then a shy, light hug, to give way, after long hours of conversation and after a long period, to a much warmer hug, and finally a kiss, as a prelude to the tender love relationship. That is the classic courtship employed by the Chinese methodological way: step by step and often tumultuous, as we continue to see among Chinese university students, in the last premiere of that country, in the one before it and in the one to come.
They reconnect again. They go back up to the roof to talk. They share the bowl of noodles again.
Mao Cai is jealous, because in the dining room he saw Xiao looking into the distance at Lao Si while he was looking for lunch for the two of them. Mao Cai will be acting in a play in which his girlfriend betrays him with another man. Mao Cai is the first to provoke Xiao: "Aren’t you worried about the female character kidnapping me? ". But Xiao replies: "It's good to have a sister-in-law. It's not bad to have someone taking care of me. To check if my future sister-in-law is suitable, I would have to go see the play…".
It doesn't end. A tormented and jealous Mao Cai, little by little, while listening to him, stopped eating, and as in his character in the play, he threw the bowl of food and left. He is already in love with Xiao. He no longer wants him as a brother. He desires it, longs for it as a lover.
It's the dress rehearsal. Mao Cai goes to Xiao's room to look for him so they can both go to the theater, but he has left early with Lao Si. At the theater, the two arrive holding hands. Mao Cai throws the bowl on the floor when he sees them and leaves the theater. Xiao thinks it's part of the performance, and applauds. He goes to Mao Cai's room. He finds out that he is in a bad mood and has not gone to rest: “Haven't you realized why Mao Cai is in a bad mood? "Shouldn't you have gone to the theater with him? ". Mao Cai's companions understand the reason for Mao Cai's mood, but Xiao is unable to understand.
They see each other on the roof. "Xiao, why didn't you wait for me to go to rehearsal? I don't know why, when I saw you holding Lao Si's hand, my heart hurt terribly. I feel like you belong to me". And after a hug: "Xiao An, do you still love this brother?". Mao Cai pulls Xiao over and they kiss.
Lan Xin, the young student and female character in the play, pursues Maocai. After the success of the play and a night of drinking, Xiao An and Mao Cai wake up naked in a hotel bed the next morning. Xiao says he doesn't remember anything from the night before, and Mao Cai throws himself at him and tells him that if he wants they can repeat what they did. That's when Lan Xin arrives to give Mao Cai the "jacket you left in my room last night." And he sits on the bed in which Xiao lies still, without getting up, naked, and tells him, before a disturbed Mao Cai, that the night before he got drunk and Mao Cai brought him to the hotel room, that he should be grateful to him. , and invites him to go eat together, the three of them. But Xiao doesn't go. And when he is alone he calls Lao Si. Xiao hugs him when Lao Si tells him how could Mao Cai leave him in that condition in the hotel. Mao Cai sees them hugging, from the doorway, with food in their hands, and leaves without them noticing. He didn't have time to go to eat with Lan Xin. He immediately returned to look for Xia. Throw the food in the trash can. Were Xiao and Mao Cai together? Were Mao Cai and Lan Xin together? At this point, Mao Cai admits to being in love with Xiao.
Apparently, Xiao believes that Mao Cai played with his feelings. That's why he is close to Lao Si now.
Lan Xin shoots a photo at Mao Cai and hands him her cell phone, but her goal is for Mao Cai to see a photo she took the day before of Xia and Lao Si in the hills "looking cute together."
Lao Sin and Xiao return from a walk. Xiao is sad. Mao Cai and Lan Xi wait for the bus to go to dinner. The four of them are seen. Mao Cai tries to talk to Xiao, but Lao Sin interferes: "if you already have the girl, why your interest in going after Xiao?" And Mao Cai hits him.
The next morning, Lan Xin calls Mao Cai from the ground floor of the building to go to breakfast, but he kindly and politely shows his disinterest.
Mao Cai calls Xiao. He awaits him in the stands of the university stadium. Arrives. It's cold. "As your friend, I'm tired. So let's stop being friends," Xiao suggests. And, when he turns his back to leave, Mao Cai gets up, hugs him from behind, surrounds Xiao's entire body with his arms, and the most beautiful declaration of love ever written in the history of cinema occurs: "Don't go." Let me tell you everything I feel. These days I haven't even seen you. I can't sleep at night. It's all you. Our chemistry, your way of lying, the way you get angry. …My mind is "Sometimes I want to go find you, but I think you want to see Lao Si. Looking at you and seeing you laugh makes my heart sad.
Here I am, annoyed with the translation. Parts of the monologue are lost or poorly translated.
Mao Cai turns Xiao on his heel, and the two look into each other's eyes. Shy, Xiao, lower your gaze. Mao Cai continues: "Do you hear me?" "Yeah". "Can you understand it?" Xiao looks up. Their gazes meet again. "NO". Mao Can, defeated, collapses his arms. And Xiao's voice is heard again, while, happily, he runs away from Mao Cai and he chases him, laughing, with happy music that plays for the first time: "I would like to hear your declaration of love again." "Xiao, idiot".
And as the credits roll, Xiao hugs Mao Cai, tells him he missed him, and will sing a song adapted for him.
Note: The structure of the review is very atypical in my production, but I am reluctant to review the film in any other way.
Chinese cinematography makes about 400 films annually, covering all genres and themes. In its exhibition halls, this production occupies 60 to 70 percent of the projection time.
They also make just over a hundred television series and about 20 cartoons for younger audiences.
The awards from European festivals are repeated, and although the Hollywood Oscar resists, the European and Asian awards are almost never missing.
The development of childhood and adolescence, the daily life of the peasantry and the development of contemporary Chinese society are among the priority themes of the Asian giant's cinematography.
Stories about young people who love, study, work, live and make their way in life are present in the Chinese films of the so-called Sixth Generation.
From the hand of contemporary filmmakers, films such as 'As black as coal' (Báirì Yànhuǒ, Diao Yinan, 2014), 'I am not Madame Bovary' (Wǒ Búshì Pān Jīnlián, Feng Xiaogang, 2016), 'Mrs. Fang' (Fang Xiu Ying, Wang Bing, 2017), 'An Elephant Sitting Still' (Dà Xiàng Xí Dì Ér zuò, Hu Bo, 2018), 'That woman/Ash is the purest white' (Jiang hu er nü, Jia Zhang Ke, 2018), 'Long journey into the night' (Dìqiú zuìhòu de yèwǎn, Bi Gan, 2018), 'Farewell, my son' (dìjiǔtiāncháng, Wang Xiaoshuai, 2019), 'The Wandering Earth' (Liu Lang Di Qiu, Frant Gwo, 2019), among others.
Queer cinema is not far behind, and if in 1996 Zhang Yuan released 'East Palace West Palace', Cu Zi En filmed 'Jiu yue' (2001), Wang Chao released 'Xun Zhao Luo Mai' (Looking for Rohmer), Lu Po-wen presented 'River Knows Fish Heart' (2018), Luo Ye filmed 'Chun feng chen zui de ye wan' ('Spring Fever' / 'Nuit d'ivresse printanière') and Xu Fang Yi exhibited 'Kinematic Theory' and 'The Ambiguous Focus', filmmaker Tang Shi premiered 'Sentimental and Peaceful Today' ('The Raccoon', or 'The Reccoon'), with a script of his own.
Originally conceived as a degree project by professors of Chinese Literature at Peking University, the interest of an increasingly large group of admirers and benefactors made it possible to turn the short film into a feature film.
'The Raccoon' is a faithful reflection of the predominant Chinese personality as a people and culture: interactions that are not warm, although love and affection are still shown. It is part of the formal nature of relationships in Chinese culture.
Gu Xiao An (actor Weng Hai Bin) is a student studying Chinese Literature at a university in Beijing. One night he receives an invitation from his dorm roommates to sleep on the roof of the building to escape the heat. Xiao An lies down, and a friend lies next to him. In the early morning he feels cold, and when he wakes up he notices that his blanket (printed with bears) does not cover him, and next to him a person sleeps with his blanket. He pulls it to get hold of it and, accidentally, touches the erect member of the sleeper, who wakes up and shouts: "It hurts, it hurts". Xiao runs away with the blanket. When he gets to his room he discovers that his friend is sleeping covered with his blanket, so he took the wrong one. He hopes that because it is dark at night, the owner of the blanket has not seen him, but the next morning he is woken up by the owner of the blanket, Mao Cai (actor Wu Di), ready to get his blanket back. The entire misunderstanding is cleared up and when Mao Cai is about to leave, Xiao tells him that he offended, upset, tried to hit someone, and not an apology. Mao Cai invites him to dinner, as an apology. Thus begins a love triangle, as Lao Si (Deng Tian Xiong), another roommate, is in love with Xiao.
Xiao and Mao Cai quickly become close friends. Mao Cai is the first to approach Xiao. He calls her "my wife" to his friends. The friends tell Mao Cai why he dresses so elegantly if his wife lives in the front room and he sees her every day. Students govern relationships in the dorms. There is no presence of any professor or administrative official of the university interfering in the lives of the students.
Xiao sick with jealousy. Moments before he argued with the handsome and slender seme Mao Cai. He is confused by his feelings for him and doesn't want him around. He remembers that Mao Cai, to his question, answered that two years ago, in high school, he was in love with a girl, but they broke up when they graduated. Xiao is sad. Mao Cai is not among the visitors to the hospital, but later, upon returning to his bedroom, he finds out that Mao Cai was the one who picked him up, took him to the hospital, and bought his medicine. This makes him go look for him and they reconnect.
At another point, the cute and sweet Mao Cai tells Xiao that he reminds him of "his brother", who died years ago. He liked bear-printed blankets, he liked the same foods that Xiao likes, and he always walked behind Mao Cai's back, as if he were his shadow, like Xiao walks behind him. "I'm going to sing for you. I'm going to call you my brother". Hugs him. Mao Cai skips his class, and enters Xiao's. He tells him not to write, to play with him. The game consists of reaching under the table and touching the other's penis. A surprised Xiao scolds him. "Are you sick?". The teacher notices. She, the only teacher in the film, is cheerful and positive when she discovers the two boys holding hands in her Chinese Literature class.
Xiao asks him, always on the rooftop where they met and where they meet, why he wants her to call him "brother". And Mao Cai tells him about his parents' divorce when he was a child. He went with his mother to another city, and his younger brother stayed with his father. Xiao now doubts if Mao Cai is in love with him or if he just reminds her of her brother. And, hurt, he distances himself again. This moment is taken advantage of by the thin and passive Lao Si to approach Xiao.
The action is slow, but the film captures the viewer, keeping them interested in the events, often with the need to put a handkerchief close to their eyes. The film takes its time to reach intimacy quickly. It is in the manner of that great Asian and universal filmography that is Chinese: the protagonists meet to talk for hours over a long period. Then a shy, light hug, to give way, after long hours of conversation and after a long period, to a much warmer hug, and finally a kiss, as a prelude to the tender love relationship. That is the classic courtship employed by the Chinese methodological way: step by step and often tumultuous, as we continue to see among Chinese university students, in the last premiere of that country, in the one before it and in the one to come.
They reconnect again. They go back up to the roof to talk. They share the bowl of noodles again.
Mao Cai is jealous, because in the dining room he saw Xiao looking into the distance at Lao Si while he was looking for lunch for the two of them. Mao Cai will be acting in a play in which his girlfriend betrays him with another man. Mao Cai is the first to provoke Xiao: "Aren’t you worried about the female character kidnapping me? ". But Xiao replies: "It's good to have a sister-in-law. It's not bad to have someone taking care of me. To check if my future sister-in-law is suitable, I would have to go see the play…".
It doesn't end. A tormented and jealous Mao Cai, little by little, while listening to him, stopped eating, and as in his character in the play, he threw the bowl of food and left. He is already in love with Xiao. He no longer wants him as a brother. He desires it, longs for it as a lover.
It's the dress rehearsal. Mao Cai goes to Xiao's room to look for him so they can both go to the theater, but he has left early with Lao Si. At the theater, the two arrive holding hands. Mao Cai throws the bowl on the floor when he sees them and leaves the theater. Xiao thinks it's part of the performance, and applauds. He goes to Mao Cai's room. He finds out that he is in a bad mood and has not gone to rest: “Haven't you realized why Mao Cai is in a bad mood? "Shouldn't you have gone to the theater with him? ". Mao Cai's companions understand the reason for Mao Cai's mood, but Xiao is unable to understand.
They see each other on the roof. "Xiao, why didn't you wait for me to go to rehearsal? I don't know why, when I saw you holding Lao Si's hand, my heart hurt terribly. I feel like you belong to me". And after a hug: "Xiao An, do you still love this brother?". Mao Cai pulls Xiao over and they kiss.
Lan Xin, the young student and female character in the play, pursues Maocai. After the success of the play and a night of drinking, Xiao An and Mao Cai wake up naked in a hotel bed the next morning. Xiao says he doesn't remember anything from the night before, and Mao Cai throws himself at him and tells him that if he wants they can repeat what they did. That's when Lan Xin arrives to give Mao Cai the "jacket you left in my room last night." And he sits on the bed in which Xiao lies still, without getting up, naked, and tells him, before a disturbed Mao Cai, that the night before he got drunk and Mao Cai brought him to the hotel room, that he should be grateful to him. , and invites him to go eat together, the three of them. But Xiao doesn't go. And when he is alone he calls Lao Si. Xiao hugs him when Lao Si tells him how could Mao Cai leave him in that condition in the hotel. Mao Cai sees them hugging, from the doorway, with food in their hands, and leaves without them noticing. He didn't have time to go to eat with Lan Xin. He immediately returned to look for Xia. Throw the food in the trash can. Were Xiao and Mao Cai together? Were Mao Cai and Lan Xin together? At this point, Mao Cai admits to being in love with Xiao.
Apparently, Xiao believes that Mao Cai played with his feelings. That's why he is close to Lao Si now.
Lan Xin shoots a photo at Mao Cai and hands him her cell phone, but her goal is for Mao Cai to see a photo she took the day before of Xia and Lao Si in the hills "looking cute together."
Lao Sin and Xiao return from a walk. Xiao is sad. Mao Cai and Lan Xi wait for the bus to go to dinner. The four of them are seen. Mao Cai tries to talk to Xiao, but Lao Sin interferes: "if you already have the girl, why your interest in going after Xiao?" And Mao Cai hits him.
The next morning, Lan Xin calls Mao Cai from the ground floor of the building to go to breakfast, but he kindly and politely shows his disinterest.
Mao Cai calls Xiao. He awaits him in the stands of the university stadium. Arrives. It's cold. "As your friend, I'm tired. So let's stop being friends," Xiao suggests. And, when he turns his back to leave, Mao Cai gets up, hugs him from behind, surrounds Xiao's entire body with his arms, and the most beautiful declaration of love ever written in the history of cinema occurs: "Don't go." Let me tell you everything I feel. These days I haven't even seen you. I can't sleep at night. It's all you. Our chemistry, your way of lying, the way you get angry. …My mind is "Sometimes I want to go find you, but I think you want to see Lao Si. Looking at you and seeing you laugh makes my heart sad.
Here I am, annoyed with the translation. Parts of the monologue are lost or poorly translated.
Mao Cai turns Xiao on his heel, and the two look into each other's eyes. Shy, Xiao, lower your gaze. Mao Cai continues: "Do you hear me?" "Yeah". "Can you understand it?" Xiao looks up. Their gazes meet again. "NO". Mao Can, defeated, collapses his arms. And Xiao's voice is heard again, while, happily, he runs away from Mao Cai and he chases him, laughing, with happy music that plays for the first time: "I would like to hear your declaration of love again." "Xiao, idiot".
And as the credits roll, Xiao hugs Mao Cai, tells him he missed him, and will sing a song adapted for him.
Note: The structure of the review is very atypical in my production, but I am reluctant to review the film in any other way.
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