The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Wang’s film focuses on victims of Mao

-

When I start filming, I think about the rapport I establishe­d with the subjects of the film. Every time, right from the outset, I make sure there is no distance. Wang Bing, award-winning director

BEIJING: Itinerant workers, abandoned children, forgotten victims of Mao-era re-education camps: all find space in Wang Bing’s lengthy cinematic exploratio­ns of life on China’s margins.

The Dead Souls, an eight-hour film-marathon which has its world premiere Wednesday in Cannes, distinguis­hed itself for its exceptiona­l length — but the epic running time is standard fare for one of China’s foremost documentar­y directors. Wang had won an award at Berlinale.

Now in his 50s, Wang made a name for himself in 2003 with his debut West of the Tracks, a nine-hour long documentar­y depicting the deprivatio­ns faced by labourers after the closure of state factories.

The piece was set in the icy winter of northeaste­rn China, where the artist filmed the agonising decline of a once flourishin­g industrial complex that symbolised of the collapse of an obsolete system.

Wang claims to be able to connect with all walks of life: his friends “are workers or peasants, poets and writers,” he said last year after the release of Bitter Money.

Winner of best screenplay at the Venice Film Festival, Bitter Money dived into life inside small textile workshops in Huzhou, where workers endure insecurity, decrepit housing and punishing schedules.

Wang’s films hone in on those who have been left behind by China’s economic miracle. The Man with no Name is a portrait of a hermit in an abandoned village; Til Madness Do Us Part is the haunting story of patients left to fend for themselves in a dilapidate­d psychiatri­c institutio­n.

Born in 1967 in the northern province of Shaanxi, Wang grew up in the countrysid­e, where his parents took refuge to escape the violence of the Cultural Revolution.

A photograph­er by training, Wang began filming, camera in hand, taking his time, in the early 2000s. His camera often focuses on still, uninterrup­ted shots.

“When I start filming, I think about the rapport I establishe­d with the subjects of the film,” Wang told AFP in 2017. “Every time, right from the outset, I make sure there is no distance.”

The Dead Souls revisits the Mao-era Jiabangou camps to examine the suffering of the ageing survivors, and completes two previous films that Wang describes as a “work of memory”.

Fengming (2007) was an unusual three-hour documentar­y that consisted mostly of a single shot of an old lady recounting the story of her life to the camera, including the “anti-rightist” campaigns of the 1950s and the imprisonme­nt of her husband at the Jiabangou “re-education through labour” camp.

The film’s raw nakedness was a poignant testimony to the forgotten victims of the “Chinese gulag”. Haunted by this dark chapter in the forging of Chinese socialism, Wang returned with The Ditch in 2010, which was based on 100 testimonia­ls.

Shot without official permission, the film describes the Jiabangou camp in the Gobi Desert where 1,500 “rightist” political prisoners were decimated by famine in 1960. Barely 300 survived.

“All around us, every day, are people with difficult lives who are not being paid attention,” Wang told AFP. “The difference is that on the screen, we dwell on their problems.”

 ??  ?? Wang claims to be able to connect with all walks of life: his friends “are workers or peasants, poets and writers”.
Wang claims to be able to connect with all walks of life: his friends “are workers or peasants, poets and writers”.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia