Sonic Cinema

Sounds, Visions and Insights by Brian Skutle

As we close the 11th year of this series, I’m doing more to write more about movies, and older movies, than ever before. I also have more going on with regards to modern movies than I previous have. That’s why, in this space, I will be closing the “Movie a Week” series, in its current form; between my other reviews, and life, I am unable to maintain the weekly pace of this series. I will not be abandoning the idea of writing about older movies, however; I will only be focusing on two older reviews a month. I hope you enjoy what I have in store.

This week, I conclude “A Movie a Week” with Zhang Yimou’s luminous drama, “Raise the Red Lantern”. I hope you enjoy!

Brian Skutle
www.sonic-cinema.com

“Raise the Red Lantern” (1991)- A+
“Raise the Red Lantern” is a staggeringly beautiful film, as well as a painfully tragic one. The film begins with the main character, Songlian, telling her mother that her dream is to marry a rich man. Her mother tells her that her life would then be that of a mistress and concubine. And so, her journey begins, as she walks to her new husband’s house, because she did not know the protocol. As she gets familiarized with the life, however, she finds marrying a wealthy man is not what she thought it would be.

Songlian is played by Gong Li, director Zhang Yimou’s muse in the early stages of his career, and it is a role that has a natural progression as the young woman learns the ins and outs of life as one of four brides, at first demanding respect, then trying to earn it through manipulation, finally breaking to a point where one choice by her sets off a chain reaction in the house that drives her mad. As the seasons change, so to do the fortunes of Songlian, leading to a truly haunting third act as her actions have dire consequences.

For much of the film, Yimou and screenwriter Ni Zhen (adapting the novel by Su Tong) look to be making a film about sexual politics between five women, all of whom have affection for Chen Zuoqian (Jingwu Ma), the master of the household. The one who seems most adept in manipulating Chen is Meishan (Saifei He), the third wife, a singer, whom feels most threatened by Songlian coming into the household; on their wedding night, Meishan feigns sickness, forcing Chen to abandon his best with Songlian, and spend the night with her. The one who appears most friendly is Zhuoyan (Cuifen Cao), the second wife, whom tries to help Songlian navigate the household, but also, desperately, wants to give Chen a son. The first, and oldest wife, is Yuru (Shuyuan Jin), and she is familiar with the game being played, and too old to play it; she has settled into the life, with a healthy son (Feipu, played by Xiao Chu) to show for it. There is a fifth woman tangled up in this web, however, and it is Yan’er (Kong Lin), Songlian’s servant, whom is in love with Chen, and jealous to be serving his latest wife. The scenes between the women, as we get to understand the way the household is run, are fascinating to watch, as we see, largely from Songlian’s perspective, how the women pit themselves against one another, and how Songlian, whom went to university for six months before her father died, forcing her into marriage, is trying to figure out how to live within those rules while creating her own. It’s that back-and-forth that makes the drama of “Raise the Red Lantern” so compelling, and the ending so heartbreaking.

Yimou is a storyteller whom shows tremendous compassion to women in his films, and identifies with them, arguably more than with men. His early work with Gong Li reflects that, and this was their finest collaboration. This is a rich, fully-developed study of a character going through the seasons, and stresses, of a way of life, and coming through the other side changed. That we feel such empathy for her, as she is walking, alone, in the courtyard, after what she has witnessed, is an image as impactful as any put on screen. The why comes down to the masterful cinematography by Lun Yang and Fei Zhao, whose use of color and shot composition creates an sensual, anxious landscape for these characters to work in, whether it’s in their bedrooms, at the dinner table, or on the roof, looking on at what is happening in the distance. Li’s performance is why we care so much; Yimou’s storytelling gives her room for boundless amounts of empathy in this complicated, emotional melodrama.

2019 “A Movie a Week” Reviews
“Ju Dou” (1990)
“Bringing Up Baby” (1938)
“American Beauty” (1999)
“The Sting” (1973)
“Rocky” (1976)
“Eve’s Bayou” (1997)
“Devil in a Blue Dress” (1995)
“Shaft” (1971)
“Boyz N the Hood” (1991)
“Short Term 12” (2013)
“Bullets Over Broadway” (1994)
“Speed” (1994)
“Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom” (1984)
“Fanny and Alexander” (1982)
“Time Bandits” (1981)
“Blade II” (2002)
“Witness” (1985)
“Clockers” (1995)
“Ransom” (1996)
“Used Cars” (1980)
“Godzilla Raids Again” (1955)
“The Blues Brothers” (1980)
“Three Ages” (1923)
“Cars 3” (2017)
“Safety Last!” (1923)
“Assassins” (1995)
“Red Cliff” (International) (2008-09)
“Battleship” (2012)
“The Abyss” (1989)
“Yoga Hosers” (2016)
“Lost Highway” (1997)
“The Lost Weekend” (1945)
“Shoot the Piano Player” (1960)
“The Castle of Cagliostro” (1979)
“Dragonslayer” (1981)
“The Trouble With Harry” (1955)
“The Big Chill” (1983)
“Little Shop of Horrors” (1986)
“The Body Snatcher” (1945)
“Scanners” (1981)
“Friday the 13th: Part VII- The New Blood” (1988)
“In the Mouth of Madness” (1995)
“Army of Darkness” (1993)
“The Shawshank Redemption” (1994)
“Dr. No” (1962)
“Tombstone” (1993)
“Mean Streets” (1973)
“Traffic” (2000)
“The Enigma of Kaspar Hauser” (1974)
“Drunken Angel” (1948)
“Gremlins” (1984)
“Raise the Red Lantern” (1991)

See Brian’s list of 2009 “Movies a Week” here.
See Brian’s list of 2010 “Movies a Week” here.
See Brian’s list of 2011 “Movies a Week” here.
See Brian’s list of 2012 “Movies a Week” here.
See Brian’s list of 2013 “Movies a Week” here.
See Brian’s list of 2014 “Movies a Week” here.
See Brian’s list of 2015 “Movies a Week” here.
See Brian’s list of 2016 “Movies a Week” here.
See Brian’s list of 2017 “Movies a Week” here.
See Brian’s list of 2018 “Movies a Week” here.
See Brian’s list of 2019 “Movies a Week” here.

2 Responses so far.

  1. Marv says:

    This is, by far, one of my favorite fantasy films of all time.

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