Lost In Beijing (2007/New Yorker Films DVD)
Picture:
C+ Sound: C+ Extras: C Film: B-
Li Yu’s Lost In Beijing (2007) is a bold
Chinese-produced/located film about married young lady worker Ping-guo, making
a living in a massage emporium when she is raped by her boss, who is
blackmailed by an outside opportunist when the victim turns out to be
pregnant. This will not make her
window-washer husband very happy either.
An initial hit in China before the government had it pulled, this well
made and even exceptional at times film set in modern China with its growing
business world may be a minor classic of their cinema.
The
acting is top rate, the honesty of the situations palpable, the eroticism does
not hold back and the story is consistent in a way where no moment is
wasted. The husband’s motives can be
taken in several ways and definitely challenges his ethics, yet the situation
can be so stark in the growing business side of the once communist society, that
we have to ask ourselves what we would do and if these characters are actually
thinking things through. Though I wanted
more story and more consideration of all the issues, Lost In Beijing is solid filmmaking and definitely recommended.
The
anamorphically enhanced 1.85 X 1 image is a little soft, but also colorful and
has its moments of clarity and depth, doing more justice than not to Director
of Photography Wang Yu’s work. The Dolby
Digital 2.0 Stereo has no surrounds, but is nicely recorded enough. Extras include a text interview with Li Yu in
a paper pullout inside the DVD case, plus trailers for this and four other New
Yorker DVD releases.
- Nicholas Sheffo