Autor Tema: Red Cherry (Daying Ye, 1995)  (Leído 739 veces)

Desconectado krillov

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Red Cherry (Daying Ye, 1995)
« en: 17 Octubre, 2006, 11:23:28 »
Título:Red Cherry
Título V.O:Hong ying tao
Director:Daying Ye
Año/País:1995 / China
Duración:120 minutos
Género:Drama
Reparto:Ke-Yu Guo, Vladmill Nizmiroff, Xiaoling Xu
Enlaces:
Ficha de:krilllov



Desconectado krillov

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Red Cherry [Daying Ye, 1995]
« Respuesta #1 en: 17 Octubre, 2006, 11:25:02 »
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Outstanding Film

I watched Red Cherry for the first time of VHS. I was immediately impressed with the outstanding acting, particularly of the two main characters, but I was a bit bothered by the jumping around from one year to the next. The subtitle quality wasn't great, either, nor were the special FX and production values up to snuff. I bought it on DVD and watched it again, and I liked it considerably better the second time, and it keeps getting better and better every time I watch it. It might take some time to get adjusted to the time jumping and weak (by big bucks Hollywood standards, anyway) special FX and whatnot, but Red Cherry has quickly climbed into my top 25 films of all time, and I've seen quite a few high quality films (Lynch, Bergman, DeSica, Kubrick, Zhang Yimou, Wong Kar-Wei, Polanski, and Kurosawa are some of my favorite filmmakers). I hope to find a higher quality DVD in the future; this film deserves so much more. I'm was really surprised to discover that this film got little recognition outside of China. Too dark, I guess, but Schindler's List was quite grim and was a major hit. Oh, well, just make sure you watch it.

The stars of the film are just perfect, and there are many scenes that are very moving. You fall in love with the main characters right away, and you like them more and more as the story progresses. There were a few scenes that reduced me to tears (scenes with Nadia, the adopted Russian girl and each of the main characters' final scenes), quite an accomplishment, as few films move me that much (Grave of the Fireflies, one of the best films ever made, got me as well). The story is told in an atypical way: the stories of the two main characters are cross-sections of their lives during a 5-year period, and the film jumps to the next year after showing a bit of their current circumstances. Once I got used to it, I didn't mind the format at all. Once I got into the film, the minor technical deficiencies seemed to disappear. Highly, highly recommended.

By the way, I don't agree that there is a lot of propaganda involved in this film. The description of the treatment of Mao revolutionaries isn't exactly complimentary to the Chinese government. They executed revolutionaries by chopping them in two at the waist with a haysickle? Yeah, that really places the Chinese government in a positive light! This story is about children and war, period. And it's a very sad and powerful story.

Desconectado asidman

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Re:Red Cherry (Daying Ye, 1995)
« Respuesta #2 en: 20 Febrero, 2011, 22:39:10 »
alguien tendra por ahi los subs de casualidad?, saludos.

"asidman", ¿qué clase de nombre es ese? Suena a superhéroe o algo por el estilo.

¿Qué te hace pensar que no lo soy?

Desconectado preacher

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Red Cherry (Daying Ye, 1995)
« Respuesta #3 en: 11 Agosto, 2022, 20:40:35 »
Curiosa y muy reivindicable película china, ambientada en Rusia y hablada casi totalmente en ruso (de hecho debe tener más diálogos en alemán que en chino).