The
Road Home Movie Review:
Due
to "political" reasons, a jury for the 1999 Cannes
Film Festival rejected "The Road Home" for submission.
Because of this, Yimou refused to
edit the film, and just pulled it from the festival altogether.
It is quite disappointing to see political agendas hindering
films like this from
getting recognized, for I did not consider the film a political
movie at all as "The Road Home" has a touchingly
simple and powerful love story at its
very heart.
Luo
(Zheng Hao) is a city man traveling back to the countryside
where he grew up. His father, the village teacher, has just
recently passed on, and
his mother is grief-stricken over the loss of her beloved.
While planning the funeral arrangements, Luo comes across
an old photograph of his parents. The film then flashbacks
to the time when Luo's young father (Sun Honglei) and mother
(Zhang Ziyi) first met and how they fell in love.
Based
on Bao Shi's novel "Rememberance", the soul of
"The Road Home" is centered on the remembering
the past. Like Yimou's other and better films, "Raise
the Red Lantern" and "Ju Dou", Yimou captures
the essence of much more colorful years gone by. Instead
of attacking issues such as sexism and societal injustices,
the film focuses more on innocence and yearns for a simpler
time. Even the cinematography blatantly shows this by having
the present time scenes in gradients of gray and white,
while the past appears in shades of bright yellows, oranges
and browns.
I
did not see anything quite radical or politically objectionable
in "The Road Home", in fact I thought that the
underlying message of a return to implicity and tradition
was quite refreshing, coming from Yimou.
The
film has a slow pace, and I wouldn't have it any other way.
"The Road Home" has a plot that does not need
to be rushed at all. The story is well
presented and developed. My only qualm with the film is
that towards the end, it gets somewhat melodramatic. So
much emotion has been extracted from the viewer already
during the course of the movie, that the overly sentimental
closing scene was quite unnecessary.
This
is Zhang Ziyi's film debut, and it is from this film that
Ang Lee recruited her for the role of Jen, the feisty young
warrior in "Crouching
Tiger, Hidden Dragon". Yimou has casted the ever so
beautiful Gong Li in his earlier films, but I think he has
found his new leading lady. Like Gong
Li, Zhang Ziyi has the screen presence and conveys emotions
truthfully which indicate that she will have a fruitful
movie career. With "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon"
under her belt, this seems to be a sure thing.
"The
Road Home" is not Yimou's best film, but one cannot
deny its endearing and heartfelt qualities. So take the
journey and see what you get out of
it.
Mazzyboi
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