The Rare Review

Movies, books, music and TV

Katy’s Folly

I heard on the radio an old, hedonistic Katy Perry song, “Last Friday Night” (2010), which deals with a night of debauchery, and of course drinking is included.

“I smell like a minibar,” the singer sings. Does the girl in this song have a boyfriend, and if so, is he disappointed? I would think that any lass who contentedly admits she smells like a minibar would provoke a boyfriend to say, I sure can pick ’em.

Qiu Ju Blues: “The Story of Qiu Ju”

Cover of "The Story of Qiu Ju"

Cover of The Story of Qiu Ju

Unlike his other major films of the Nineties, Zhang Yimou‘s The Story of Qiu Ju (1993) is set in contemporary China and is thus not a period piece.  It is, however, a film that enables him once again to censure authoritarianism (read Communism) while unassumingly focusing on other subjects and themes as well.  The elusiveness of justice, the problem of persistence without thought, the alien nature of the big city to a rural denizen—these are the most important themes.  The struggle to win an official apology is Qiu Ju‘s subject.  The struggle is undertaken by a pregnant peasant woman (Gong Li), and the movie ends sadly enough to further buttress Zhang’s vision.

(In Mandarin with English subtitles)

 

Qiu Ju Blues: “The Story of Qiu Ju”

Cover of "The Story of Qiu Ju"

Cover of The Story of Qiu Ju

Unlike his other major films of the Nineties, Zhang Yimou‘s The Story of Qiu Ju (1993) is set in contemporary China and is thus not a period piece.  It is, however, a film that enables him once again to censure authoritarianism (read Communism) while unassumingly focusing on other subjects and themes as well.  The elusiveness of justice, the problem of persistence without thought, the alien nature of the big city to a rural denizen—these are the most important themes.  The struggle to win an official apology is Qiu Ju‘s subject.  The struggle is undertaken by a pregnant peasant woman (Gong Li), and the movie ends sadly enough to further buttress Zhang’s vision.

(In Mandarin with English subtitles)

 

Frankly—“Idiots First”

A very satisfying fiction is Bernard Malamud‘s story, “Idiots First,” a fast-moving, tough-minded achievement. Nobody does desperation better than Malamud as he describes the doings of a dying elderly man trying to acquire enough money to send his mentally impaired son to the son’s uncle.

The story is dark but not at all despairing. A ray of light is tossed in when a lurking grim reaper (he is supernatural and hangs around the elderly man) proves he is something more than a creature of “awful wrath.” It brings some mild relief; “Idiots First” brings fascination.

Train A-Comin’ With Zombies: “Train to Busan”

Train to Busan (2016), by Sang-ho Yeon, is one of the best entertainment movies I’ve seen, and it deals with zombies. From South Korea, it resembles pop pictures of the past (like Invasion of the Body Snatchers) in that it is character-rich and tells an actual story, without being over-plotted.

Gong Yoo plays a divorced father who is selfish and discourteous until he has to protect from the biting zombies his small daughter and her pregnant, supportive friend. The film has an outstanding child actor in Su-an Kim, and the action is exciting. Plus, Busan is poignant—something you don’t find every day in a non-artistic pop movie.

(In Korean with English subtitles)

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