
Feng liu yi dai
A Chinese woman lives for herself in silence, celebrating the prosperous Belle Epoque with songs and dance.
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⭐ Featured Review
"Jia Zhangke had a lot of leftovers so he mixed that up and added something new and here we are. It works, although the first part is the weakest, being the least focused and padded with unrelated documentary-like shots. It really reminded me of West of the Tracks, the mammoth documentary by Wang Bing, with its focus on workers and their downtime empty pursuits. There's minimal narration and it kind of hurts the overall story, lucky for me I had seen Unknown Pleasures and was familiar with the main events still so I was clutching to the few scenes where Qiaoqiao appears. The shift to the ..."
💡 Did You Know?
Jia Zhang-ke incorporated footage and outtakes from previous films he had directed into this one, including Unknown Pleasures (2002), Still Life (2006), and Ash Is Purest White (2018). About 10 scenes from this film had previously appeared in the aforementioned movies.
📖 Synopsis
A Chinese woman lives for herself in silence, celebrating the prosperous Belle Epoque with songs and dance.





