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Bei yazi de nanhai (2005)

GENRESDrama
LANGMandarin,Chinese
ACTOR
Xiaopei LiuJie WangYun Xu
DIRECTOR
Liang Ying

SYNOPSICS

Bei yazi de nanhai (2005) is a Mandarin,Chinese movie. Liang Ying has directed this movie. Xiaopei Liu,Jie Wang,Yun Xu are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2005. Bei yazi de nanhai (2005) is considered one of the best Drama movie in India and around the world.

A 17 year old boy from a village in the Sechuan province leaves for the big city looking for his father, who left 6 years before and has not been heard of since. The fact that his mother still receives money his father does nothing to tame his anger. He his not looking for a warm reunion, it is unconcealed revenge that drives him. Totally lost, he roams the big city with his basket of ducks on his back...

Bei yazi de nanhai (2005) Reviews

  • One of the most remarkable cinema debuts of the decade

    cudas2007-04-12

    Breathingly remarkably fresh life into a hackneyed-sounding plot, Taking Father Home announces the arrival of a terrific new film-making talent. Filmed for almost nothing with a borrowed camera and featuring a cast almost entirely made up of friends and relatives of Ying (in China, as in Japan and other East Asian countries, surnames come first) and his producer/creative-partner Peng Shan, Taking Father Home is the story of a teenager (Xu Yun) from a remote village who travels to the big city of Zigong with no money and a brace of ducks in a basket on his back. His mission: to find and retrieve his errant father, who walked out on his family six years before. Yun learns an awful lot very quickly once he arrives in Zigong, as there's no shortage of mentor-figures eager to impart advice. His is a compelling quest, and we're with him every step of the way thanks to Ying's remarkable evocation of Zigong's sights, smells and sounds: if this weren't enough, he somehow manages to express the mood and character of an entire culture with just the simplest of touches and what seems to be the most basic of dialogue. By the end, Taking Father Home has become an utterly engaging emotional experience, and Ying has established himself as one of world cinema's promising young talents. You'll be hearing much more of and from him in years to come.

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