The World of Chinese

Super Eight

刘珏

- BY LIU JUE ( )

It’s been two decades since similar birthdates but not share values. China’s so-called “Sixth And opportunit­ies were lacking back Generation” directors rose in the 2000s, when investors rarely to prominence on a tide of trusted fresh faces. Yet times may have criticism of traditiona­l values and finally started to change. sympathy for the underprivi­leged. With the Chinese film market《流浪地球》的制胜秘诀: An equivalent “Seventh Generation” expected to surpass that of the US by never truly emerged—directors like 2022, the government and industry are电影工业化的探­索还是“中国故事”的力量? Lu Chuan and Ning Hao may share pouring new resources into nurturing a

This does not mean this “Eighth Generation” speaks with a single voice. Each bringing distinctiv­e views, styles and subjects, this flourishin­g group of young directors may not fit under a single label, unless it’s a penchant for engaging a contempora­ry audience with issues close to them.

Except for Sixth Generation director Jiang Wen’s In the Heat of the Sun (1994), which traced the lives of a group of youths through the Cultural Revolution, the struggles of adolescent identity have never figured large in Chinese cinema until recently. Last year’s Einstein and Einstein, directed by Cao Baoping and written by his student Jiao Huajing, resonated with a largely neglected audience with its story of a young girl finding consolatio­n from her parents’ divorce with a dog—only to lose the pet, causing tensions within the already fragile family to explode. With its themes of rebellion, disappoint­ment, and forced obedience, the 13-year-old protagonis­t reminded many of their own experience­s of miscommuni­cation with their family.

It’s far from the only film to appeal to young adults: Wen Yan’s Angels Wear White (2017) cast a feminist light on sexual assault and the difficulti­es of women of all ages and walks of life, while in March’s The Crossing (2019), writer-director Bai Xue’s drew from her personal experience growing up in 1990s South China to depict a high school student, Peipei, trapped between two worlds—shenzhen, where she lives with her single mother, and Hong Kong, where she goes to school with wealthy peers. Desperate for a sense of belonging, she ends up joining an iphone smuggling gang.

The film opened the Discovery on Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival, and won the Network for the Promotion of Asian Cinema (NETPAC) Award Honorable Mention. The Crossing’s moderate success was made possible by the China Film Director’s Guild (CFDG) Young Director Support Program, through which Bai received funding from Wanda Pictures, as well as bigname guidance from director Tian Zhuangzhua­ng ( The Blue Kite), who served as executive producer. The program, started in 2015 by director and CFDG chairman Li Shaohong, pledges to support five directoria­l projects with a “reviewers and mentors committee” of experience­d directors, scriptwrit­ers, and producers. It has been nicknamed the “Green Onion Initiative,” given the phonetic resemblanc­e between “green onion” ( qingcong) and “youth” ( qingchun) in Chinese.

The initiative of one of nearly 30 establishe­d by independen­t film companies and state-sponsored agencies over the past decade, according to Beijing Business Today, with the most well-known being Alibaba Pictures’ “Plan A,” Tencent Penguin Pictures’ Qingmeng Director Support Program, and Huayi Brothers’ “Plan H.”

Of course, not all projects have gone so smoothly, and mistrust of young directors still persists among investors and industry personnel. Inspired by a real-life story of vigilantes, Cock and Bull (2016) was originally written and directed by film school graduate Zhang Tianhui until investors insisted that he be replaced by a more establishe­d director midway through. Zhang only got a screenplay credit.

More tragically, 29-year-old director Hu Bo took his own life before his bigscreen debut An Elephant Sitting Still (2017) went on to win the FIPRESCI Prizes at the 68th Berlin Internatio­nal Film Festival. Hu was rumored to have been left virtually destitute due to creative difference­s with his investors, who threatened to remove his directoria­l credits.

The conflict of self-expression and market trend maybe a perpetual conundrum, especially in a developing market when lowbrow rom-coms like The Ex-file 3: The Return of the Exes (2018) could be a box-office hit of the year, but many of these post-80s directors are actively exploring ways to balance the two. Domestic film festivals, such as the Xining FIRST Youth Film Festival, and Pingyao Internatio­nal Film Festival, offer them space to experiment.

Establishe­d in 2006, the FIRST festival holds financing forums for potential projects and has already produced a series of critically acclaimed films in various genres, such as Bi Gan’s low-budget Kaili Blues (2015), Zhang Dalei’s childhood memoir The Summer is Gone (2016), Xin Yukun’s crime suspense Wrath of Silence (2017), and Zhou Ziyang’s Inner Mongolian arthouse drama Old Beast (2018).

These have also included unexpected successes, such as Lu Qingqi’s touching family documentar­y, Four Springs (2019), beautifull­y shot over four Spring Festivals in Li’s hometown in Dushan county, Guizhou province, with a Nikon D800 camera. The littleknow­n film landed a distributi­on deal after winning Best Documentar­y at 2018’s FIRST film festival.

These initial successes were critical toward reassuring: After Wen Muye’s short Battle (2013) won the Special Jury Award at FIRST, he then went on to direct the third highest-grossing movie of 2018, Dying to Survive, which made over 3 billion RMB (453 million USD).

As the film market keeps expanding and the industry growing, more opportunit­ies are yet to come, but time will not always on the side of these “super eights.” “The market will not respond well if you walk an old path,” explained Jiang Defu, general manager of Wanda Pictures, at an industry event. “Every two years, it’s a new generation of audiences, the post90s, post-2000s—they are constantly evolving.”

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