The Guardian (USA)

Coronation review – Ai Weiwei's harrowing coronaviru­s documentar­y

- Charles Bramesco

In the west, government­al response to the coronaviru­s has been marked by sluggishne­ss, miscommuni­cation and widespread disorder at the highest institutio­nal levels. From the Trump White House to Johnson’s Number 10, citizens have been left in the dark or left to die as official policy and implemente­d containmen­t programs offer far too little, too late. But in Asia, it would seem that they did everything right. Swift and sweeping action “flattened the curve” and kept one of Earth’s most populous countries to a casualty count under 5,000 – a figure dwarfed by the death toll in the United States.

The harrowing new documentar­y Coronation, made remotely and in secret by the artist-activist Ai Weiwei while stuck in Europe, conducts a slow-cinema investigat­ion of how the cradle of this pandemic rose to best it. An assortment of amateur cinematogr­aphers in the viral epicenter of Wuhan captured stunning and terrible footage of a city plunged into crisis, their contributi­ons organized under Ai’s pointed, critical vision. In these meditation­s from an emergency, he arranges a dualistic picture of modern China as a force of great might, for better and for worse. The formidable national apparatuse­s that empowered the Chinese people to mobilize themselves and minimize the damage cut both ways, illustrati­ng the hazards of a heavily centralize­d federal system along with its potential to do good. Ai frames this global cataclysm as an exacerbati­ng force, a trial by fire that accents and amplifies the alreadysim­mering tensions between the individual and the state. Through this mosaic of common life in an uncommon time, he asks the troubling question of whether submission must be the cost of protection.

The film bills itself as the first feature-length documentar­y about the coronaviru­s, an up-to-the-minute rush job produced and edited over the past few months. And while this haste meant sacrificin­g some of the meticulous­ness of the film-maker’s designs — his favored drone photograph­y doesn’t have so much of the mesmerizin­g mandala quality on display in his previous doc Human Flow – it’s remarkable how he maintains his elements of style despite secondhand shooting. In his signature legato long takes, he pieces together a grand image of the planet from intimate snapshots of its smallest tragedies. He trains his gaze first on the Wuhan landscape itself, its expanses of ruin bathed in a rigor-mortis grey, and

then on the people surviving within it.

Many of them wrestle with a quandary now faced all over the world, as personal freedom and public security have started to feel like opposing forces. An early passage follows a couple attempting to drive back into Wuhan, their movements regulated and restricted. It’s easy to understand why these measures have been put into place, and yet it’s difficult to accept the side-effect of increased surveillan­ce, unintended or no. Much of the Chinese counteroff­ensive involves the collecting and control of informatio­n with unpreceden­ted precision. The government knowing where everyone and everything is at any given time sounds like a dystopia, but it may also be the most effective and efficient way of quelling a plague.

The scale and authority of the Chinese state enabled its agencies to deploy street-cleaning robots and erect labyrinthi­ne hospital facilities practicall­y overnight, and yet those same qualities made assistance widely inaccessib­le on a person-by-person basis. We meet a grieving son, forced to slog through a bureaucrat­ic thicket just to take ownership of his father’s ashes. More Kafkaesque still, a temporary constructi­on worker leaves Wuhan only to find he cannot return to his home of Henan or re-enter the city from which he came, with no remaining option but to live out of his car. (A heartbreak­ing one-line footnote in the press kit states that he did gain entry to Henan after filming completed, where he then took his own life.)

A more explicitly ideologica­l component takes shape in the second hour, crystalliz­ed in an argument over politics and media between an older former revolution­ary and her more pragmatic son. She rejects the quarantine outright as a clear violation of her liberties, while he tries to reconcile his belief in the President Xi Jinping’s plan with his healthy skepticism about his messaging. Variations on their generation­al conflict play out less directly all over the film; a cheery instructor teaches a group of young people a dance routine encouragin­g washing of the hands in one scene, and in another, a demonstrat­ion blends allegiance to the party and commitment to the cause of safety into a single nationalis­t spirit.

Alternatin­g between a disarming urban beauty and a grim techno surrealism of hoverboard­s and thermomete­r guns, Ai memorializ­es a moment of far-reaching consequenc­e. Even after the virus has been eradicated, its manmade consequenc­es will continue for decades. He posits this unnatural disaster as an inflection point for the ongoing struggle between obedience and individual­ity that his entire career has tracked – a glimpse of apocalypse not from arbitrary physical ruin, but from an organized campaign. He sounds a universal alarm: while we’re just trying to get through, they’re trying to get all they can.

Coronation is available to rent digitally worldwide here

 ??  ?? A still from Coronation. Photograph: Alamo Drafthouse
A still from Coronation. Photograph: Alamo Drafthouse
 ??  ?? Photograph: Alamo Drafthouse
Photograph: Alamo Drafthouse

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