< >【<IMG src="http://club.topdigi.com.cn/images/face/23.gif">Gillian女士】 于 2003-9-22 3:22:40 加贴在 <FONT color=#336699><b>一场风花雪月的事</b></FONT> </P>
< >Synopsis
At eighteen, Jing loses her mother in an accident. For the first time she comes face to face with her father, Lao Yu, of whom she has only had a few glimpses in the nearby alley while growing up. Life with this unfamiliar figure starts in an awkward way. Bit by bit her resentments fade away and she begins to appreciate his good-humored kindness. The attention he gives her, his determination to spoil her---the only person he is sure of loving---is something she has never had before, not even from her mom. Before long, Jing concludes that having a dad is not such a bad thing.
Dad runs a bar which, according to Jing’s aunt, is “too smoky and full of jerks.” But Jing does not mind doing her homework and spending time there everyday after school. Although Dad does not quite act like a dad when he is with his buddies in the bar, once he goes home, he goes back to the funny, caring father Jing has learned to accept. Their life together seems peaceful and pleasant.
One evening, returning from school, Jing finds the bar turned up side down, and Lao Yu held down by the police. Stunned and motionless, she hears dad’s pleading amidst the chaos to let her go home. Lao Yu is sent to jail for the shady business he and his partner conduct. Jing’s life is changed again.
Jing is reunited with her father after he is released from prison. The reunion fills her with complex emotions. By now she has entered adulthood, and has made many life choices on her own. She chooses a life path much different from her father’s. Surprised and hurt by Jing’s decision to marry and move to another city, Lao Yu starts a heated argument with his daughter at the farewell dinner. Unable to dissuade her, her reluctantly accepts the separation, which is equally painful for Jing.
Two years later Jing returns home alone, and is about to give birth to a baby. The newborn gives Lao Yu, now jobless and moneyless, new hope and meaning in life. His only wish is to give his daughter and granddaughter a life that is happy and free of worries. Despite Jing’s protest, Lao Yu resorts to gambling, which eventually gives him his final blow.
At the first anniversary of Lao Yu’s death, Jing and her new-formed family visit the cemetery. Standing in front of dad’s tombstone, she reflects…</P>
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About the WRITER, DIRECTOR, PRODUCER & LEAD ACTRESS
XU JINGLEI was born in Beijing and trained as on actor at Beijing Film Academy. Upon graduation in 1997, she gained instant popularity among China’s young generation for her roles in various TV series. In 1999, she won the prestigious Chinese Film Society Performance Award for her first major film role in Spicy Love Soup.
2001 was a breakthrough year for her on the big screen, as she was cast as the female lead in three films: Zhang Yibai’s Spring Subway, Zhang Yuan’s I Love You and Yu Zhong’s Bei Yan Nan Fei. Her performance in Spring Subway won her the Most Popular Actress Award at the Chinese University Film Festival. I Love You, which received official invitation to over twenty international festivals including Pusan, South Korea &Sundance. USA, has given her further exposure to an audience worldwide. Derek Elley of Variety describes her performance as “remarkably textured” and “should establish her as a young talent way beyond Mainland borders.”
Due to her dynamic portrayal of characters in China’s contemporary life, she has become the very image of women of the new generation, fusing vitality, independence, and complexity. The widely influential New Weekly Magazine voted her as the “Representative of the She-Century” in 2002, highly praising her as the role model for women in China of the next century.
Unsatisfied with the success she has achieved as an actor, she went on to make her own film. My Father and I marks her directing debut. Her inspiration came form the |