previously published on Asian Movie Pulse
Asia
is not just a huge and still growing box office market, but also the
place of origin for top-notch cinema in the recent years, so it
should not come as surprise that A-list film festivals have more and
more Asian films in their competition, and, as it was the case with
recently finished Black Nights Film Festival in Tallinn, Estonia, to
come on the very top at the awards night. Regarding its director's
reputation, as an established female filmmaker who is more than ready
to criticize the inequalities in the Chinese society (as she
demonstrated in her 2012 debut feature "Lotus"), and the
film's reputation as well (for winning the post-production award at
Rotterdam), Liu Shu's "Lost Lotus" was one of the
most expected world premieres at the festival. However, the end
result is somewhat underwhelming.
Wu
Yu (Yan Wensi) is a school teacher whose seemingly harmonious
life gets derailed when her mother ends up as a fatal victim of a
hit-and-run accident. Wu is dedicated to her job and her students at
work and is content with her life at home with her supportive
policeman husband (Zhao Xuan) with whom she tries to conceive
a child. Wu's mother was a religious person, an almost fanatical
Buddhist, and, after her death, Wu dives head-on into her mother's
beliefs, at first out of respect for her and her conviction, but
later it starts to look like an obsession and a futile attempt for
her to connect with her late mother, so strong that Wu does not even
notice the inconsistencies between the preachings and the practices
of the local priest.
In a
parallel plot line, the police investigation of the incident drags
slowly, eventually revealing that the perpetrator is an influential
businessman who tries to buy off Wu's silence with a sweet financial
compensation. The offer drives the rift, already started with the
couple's attitude towards religion (Wu's husband is a radical
atheist, which might also serve as a code of sorts for his political
standpoint), even further and leaves Wu alone in her pursuit of
justice.
The
trouble with the film starts with its script and the treatment of
Wu's actions on this front. Simply put, they are too poorly thought
of and planned for a woman of her intelligence and statute. There is
a high probability that the whole thing is purposely constructed by
Liu as an attempt to stress her heroine's inability to deal with the
injustices of the system that is fuelled by money and steered by the
power of authority, but it works only to a point. Liu puts a lot of
elements and perspectives throughout the plot, like Wu's own
character inconsistency between the newly found religious beliefs and
her own lack of will or wisdom to live by the codes of patience and
forgiveness, but all those complex issues remain touched only in a
superficial manner.
Saving
grace might be found in the film's technical elements, including
Liu's directing aimed in seamlessly building up the melodrama in
character as the plot moves on. The cinematography handled by Zheng
Yi focused on ordinary persons, ordinary things and ordinary
locations of a nameless Chinese city serves the purpose, while
Patrick Minks' editing is smooth with a clear sense of rhythm.
The
real star of the film is, however, the Chinese-Canadian actress in
the lead role, Yan Wensi, glimpsed in Tarsem Singh's "Mirror
Mirror" (2012), before landing a lead role in an immigrant drama
"A Touch of Spring" (He Xiaodan, 2017). She is given
a complex task to operate in different emotional registers throughout
the film, but also to stay graceful while inducing the viewers'
emotions and appealing to their ratio. Her portrait of fragility and
desperation of a woman left alone in a corrupt society is more than
compelling.
All
things considered, "Lost Lotus" is a film that stays in the
limbo between its directors noble intentions and considerable
ambition to deal with complex psychological and social issues on one
side and the lack of nuance and eloquence to do so on the other.
Topic-wise, it is a moderately important film and that is enough to
propel it on an extended festival tour where it would reach the
target, festival-going audience. But, in the end, it is more of a
"filler" type of film than an essential watch.
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