Platform

(Zhantai)

In Conversation

  • Michael Berry is a Professor of Contemporary Chinese Cultural Studies at UCLA.

featuring

Wang Hongwei, Zhao Tao, Liang Jingdong,

China’s tumultuous 1980s are revisited in this hyperrealistic account of one provincial theater troupe’s struggles in a landscape that is dizzily moving from post–Cultural Revolution isolation to a consumer-age nightmare of bad perms and disco fever. The troupe begins in 1979 as the Fenyang Peasant Culture Group, desultorily performing propaganda songs about Chairman Mao, but ten years (and a century’s worth of economic and social changes) later, they’ve morphed into the All-Star Rock ’n’ Breakdance Electronic Band, performing Cantopop and Michael Jackson to dwindling audiences and increasingly corrupt paymasters, whether politicians or police. Well-versed in the dusty forgotten towns and no-hope landscapes that his characters travel, Jia Zhangke covers an entire decade’s—and an entire nation’s—transformation from communism to capitalism as one group tries to make sense of it all, and frequently fails to. Touching and sometimes hilarious, Platform is essential viewing for anyone interested in China’s history, the effects of global capitalism, and—not least—great filmmaking.

Jason Sanders
FILM DETAILS 
Screenwriter
  • Jia Zhangke
Cinematographer
  • Yu Lik-wai
Language
  • Mandarin
  • with English subtitles
Print Info
  • Color
  • 35mm
  • 155 mins
Source
  • La Cinémathèque québécoise
Permission
  • Janus Films

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