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January 15, 2007 Monday Zilhaj 24, 1427





Chinese peasants making true to life movies



By Audra Ang


JINGDEZHEN (China): Father, I Should Not Lie to You, a morality tale about a teenage girl who lies to her parents to get money for the cellphone she covets. It’s a two-part, 72-minute drama that has joined the ranks of a revolutionary concept in Chinese film-making about, for and by peasants.

Despite their unpolished look and the wide availability of cheap, pirated Hollywood blockbusters on DVD, these low-budget, high-drama movies are taking root among their natural and sizable audience of China’s 800 million rural residents.

“Most of the films shown in China are not related to the lives of the farmers. I decided to make one that filled that gap,” said Xu Mingwen, the director of Father, which aired recently on a TV station in the heartland province of Hunan.The farmer film industry is still too small for there to be official figures on how many titles are produced a year. Finished products often go direct to DVD or are distributed for free so farmers can watch them in small screening rooms or at home in their villages.

Their themes mainly reflect the challenges farmers face in a once mainly agricultural society that is rushing headlong into an urban, industrial 21st century future: the lure of cities, the perils of migration and the temptations of capitalist consumer culture.

“I found that some students like expensive items such as mobile phones, which is not very good. So I decided to shoot a film with an aim to educate them,” said Xu, a 42-year-old vegetable farmer who runs a small studio that specialises in making videos of weddings.

The peasant filmmakers “want to find a channel to speak to the public who don’t know about their situation,” said Wu Wenguang, a documentary filmmaker who led a project in which ten farmers filmed their villages’ local elections.

“This is a way for them to show this for the first time,” he said. “It’s fresh. It’s interesting.”

The farmer-film genre is another sign of the social changes wrought by nearly three decades of free-market reforms. For most of China’s storied 3,000-year-old history, peasants were a passive force in a culture dominated and defined by Confucian scholars. After Mao’s revolution, political commissars defined depictions of rural society.

Now farmers increasingly have the means and time to tell their own stories.

“Look at how far we’ve progressed -- farmers can now make films,” said Li Meiying, an energetic 52-year-old who often plays the role of “woman in crowd” in movies directed by Zhou Yuanqiang, a pioneer in the peasant film movement.

“We’re more free. Our standard of life has improved,” Li said. “When I was little, we did not even have shoes.”

Zhou is a one-man movie industry. Since 1992, he has been writing, directing, taping and editing films and TV series depicting the life of Chinese peasants in ancient, revolutionary and modern times.

As a teenager, Zhou lent books and organised sports games for fellow peasants as they farmed the fields on the outskirts of Jingdezhen, a city in the southern province of Jiangxi that has for centuries been known for its delicate porcelain. Zhou said he “saw people scramble for picture books” and realized how starved everyone was for culture.

In 1980, he joined the city’s cultural bureau and began showing videotapes of kung fu and military exercises to farmers. A decade later, he began shooting documentary histories of the area. Then a change of topic occurred to him.

“I also realised farmers lacked cultural activities of their own,” he said. “I wanted to reflect their lives by helping them shoot a film about themselves.”

Most peasant films are shot on minimal budgets, with actors usually working for free. Directors like Xu and Zhou raise additional money by videotaping weddings and other events.

“The purpose of making films is not to make money but to make farmers feel happy and enrich their cultural lives,” Zhou said.

Xu’s Father, I Should Not Lie to You was typical. It was filmed in his hometown of Liuyang, inside his home, temples and cellphone shops, and cost 100,000 yuan ($12,500), most of it borrowed.

The script, a 20,000-word tearjerker, was penned in a month by Xu’s 19-year-old daughter, who dropped out of school in 2003 to help cut back on household expenses, a common problem in rural China, where incomes are low and education is expensive.

“I am sure more farmers will do the same thing as their lives are getting better and better,” Xu said. “By making a film, people can learn a lot and experiment with life. It is probably the best way to acquire experience.”—AP






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