|
"Lucky Dog" |
|
|
|
Written by Derek Elley
|
|
Wednesday, 17 October 2007 |
Beijing Screenings
Lucky Dog
Erduo Da You Fu (China-South Korea)
A Liaoning Film Studio, Changchun Film Studio,
Shenyang New Fashion Culture Advertising Co. (China)/United Film Studio
of Korea (South Korea) production. (International sales: United Film
Studio, Seoul.) Produced by Liu Lijuan. Executive producers, Zhao
Guogang, Chen Beijing, Choi Kwang-suk, Liu Chun. Directed, written by Zhang Meng. Executive director, Noh Yun.
With: Fan Wei, Zhang Ke, Qi Lianchun, Cheng Shubo, Li Mu, Jia Se, Tian Yu, Liang Shuang, Zhang Wenyi, Xiang Yan, Chen Haifeng, Guan Xiaoping, Zhang Huizhi, Li Bo, He Zixuan, Zhang Shu'nan, Zhang Yi, Zhang Wei, Zhang Jibo, Wang Sa, Shen Jiaxue, Zhang Yongyan, Sun Baozhu, Zhao Naixun, Hu Yanping, Liu Jiangcao, Ge Yunping.
(Mandarin dialogue)
Quotidian urban life in contempo China is shown with quiet irony and
warm compassion in "Lucky Dog," an engaging, character-driven dramedy
by first-time writer-director Zhang Meng. Tale of a day-or-so in the
life of a just-retired working-class stiff is a splendid showcase for
the dry humor of well-known comedian Fan Wei, who essayed a similar,
though darker, role in "The Parking Attendant in July" (2003). Skedded
for Mainland release next February, "Dog" looks likely to wag festival auds' tails and pick up some tube deals in Europe.
After
40 years' loyal service on the railroad as a mechanical engineer, Wang
Kangmei (Fan) has retired. Though his wife (Cheng Shubo) is in hospital
and his income is now a fraction of what it was, Wang remains
resolutely optimistic.
A modern version of Lu Xun's
classic Chinese innocent Ah Q, Wang has never questioned any aspect of
his life or his country's history. He reads the official papers,
listens to radio news programs and goes about his daily routine with
bluff confidence. And he's determined to find some kind of work,
deeming himself still employable at age 55.
Majority of the pic
is set during the following day, as Wang moves around the city, meeting
various people. Though the structure is basically episodic, the film
never lingers too long on any one vignette, and the tight editing by Ma
Yanyan and helmer Zhang's ear for natural dialogue make for a gently
flowing portrait, not only of Wang himself, but of a whole human
landscape in an average, ramshackle town in northeast China. (Pic shot
in Ji'an, in Jilin province.)
First up, Wang has his fortune told
by a woman with a roadside computer (Liang Shuang); next, he visits a
shoeshine lady (Xiang Yan); then, he takes over for a while from a
pedicabber (Guan Xiaoping) whose rig is fitted with a stereo music
center; and finally, he tries auditioning for a local opera troupe.
Each
of these encounters ends badly, with Wang sometimes not even realizing
it's ended badly. But he carries on, finally visiting his infirm father
(Zhao Naixun), who secretly worries about him. Day is also peppered
with trips to his wife's bedside.
In other hands, the story could
have ended up as a bleak, downbeat trudge, but the combination of
Zhang's quizzical eye and Fan's full-of-life perf make pic a humanistic
delight. Plenty of Chinese pics have critiqued the country's economic
dash to market, but none has done it in such an undoctrinaire way.
Zhang's
script, written four years ago, was inspired by the life of his uncle.
Fan committed to starring in it just before making "Parking Attendant,"
but pic only started shooting in spring 2006, following partial
financing by South Korean producer Choi Kwang-suk. Direction is as
natural as the perfs, helped by South Korean d.p. Gu Jae-mo's
discreetly pointed lensing. Wang Sa's triumphant military band music
adds a further level of irony.
Chinese title is a saying that "people with big ears have lots of luck."
Camera (color), Gu Jae-mo; editor, Ma Yanyan; music, Wang Sa; art directors, Zhang Yi, Zhang Shu'nan; costume designer, Li Shuyan; sound (Dolby Digital),
Yang Yuedong; assistant directors, Zhang Jiaxuan, Zhang Ke. Reviewed on
DVD, Pusan, Oct. 9, 2007. (In Beijing Screenings.) Running time: 100
MIN.
© Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
There is a problem with the comment system, or you do not have javascript enabled.
|
|
Sign up to the FREE daily Variety Asia e-zine:
Kaiju comeback
|