Raise
the Red Lantern Movie Review:
I've
seen many foreign films, but, as with American films, only
a few of them can be considered the very best of classics.
The Chinese film Raise the Red Lantern can be put onto this
list. The film is strong, mature, and well-crafted - even
as it tells a story which seems mere soap opera.
We
are introduced to a world which appears ancient, dated,
peculiar to our modern Western eyes. A rich and powerful
man has many servants and maids catering to his every whim.
He also has a number of wives, or maybe concubines would
be a better term. He treats these wives much like the other
possessions in his home, and forces them into a weird ritual,
basically putting on a big show every night after choosing
the woman he wants to be with. There are lanterns hung around
each wife`s "house", and the servants are asked by the man
to light those which hang around the house of the woman
he wants to be with on any given day.
A
new wife, Wife number four, enters the picture. Played by
Gong Li, she seems very reluctant to be a part of this arrangement,
but, defeatist, she claims that such servitude is the fate
of Chinese women. She enters into a household where tempers
and basic human nature boils to a fever pitch.
As
the new wife enters the manor, we see a glimpse of the personalities
she is up against. The first, old, wife seems to see Li
as a potential source of trouble. The second wife seems
jovial and accepting of this new person. And the third wife,
a former opera singer, seems very snobby, as she won`t even
introduce herself properly to this new person, and, on Li`s
first night with the husband, even calls him away on the
pretense that she is ill. It must seem clear from this paragraph
where the trouble lies, and that seems to be with the third
wife. But the story is not as simple as that. In fact, the
third wife may not be as much of a threat as first appears,
and perhaps another person, whom Gong Li would least expect,
is much more devious. The story develops with genuine intrigue,
as numerous betrayals, revealations, and backstabbings mount,
leading up to the shattering ending.
The
sub-text of the film is the fact that these women, with
their fighting over who will be with the husband tonight,
and other general attacks on each other, are only acting
this way because they live in a society in which women do
not have very many rights. Due to their lack of freedom,
they fight for what they could conceivably get, which in
this case is the attention of the husband and the privileges
which go with being the chosen one for the evening. One
of the privileges is being able to pick the food for the
evening`s dinner, and in one case the lucky woman gets back
at Gong Li`s character by not serving her enough vegetables,
which is mostly all Li will eat. Another situation which
would normally seem very melodramatic and trashy, but is
important, is the fight to have a son by the husband. The
first and the third wives both have sons, but the second
wife has a girl, and soon develops an obsessive hope to
have a son. This would normally be pure soap, but the truth
of the matter is that girls are not desirable, and the women
do not want to lose favour by giving birth to a useless
individual. The second wife`s daughter is even referred
to as a cheap little girl. These cultural facts colour the
emotions on display.
Visually,
the film is close to perfection. The setting itself looks
great, and would seem like an awesome place to visit or
even live, if not for the systematic oppression which exists
there. The direction is subtle and stately, elevating the
plot to great heights. This is necessary, because without
this, many of the situations in this film would seem gratuitous.
And there are a few lurid and shocking events in this film,
which, in an exploitation film, for example, would be shown
much more vividly. But the story`s message does not lie
in shocking details, but in the environment in which the
women live in as a whole. The movie is not cheap, but very
grand in its storytelling and performances.
Raise
the Red Lantern is simply one of the great films. The story
works on two levels - as a classic soap, and as a glimpse
into how China treats its women. Such multiple levels of
context only enriches the entertainment value of the film,
and is certainly enough motivation for me at least to watch
even more films from China.
David
Macdonald
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