From Hollywood to Home: Black Voices in Entertainment
Dispatches from northern China, Jia Zhangkeโs movies constitute their own cinematic universe. Repeatedly returning to themes of globalization and alienation, the 55-year-old director has meticulously chronicled his countryโs uneasy plunge into the 21st century as rampant industrialization risks deadening those left behind.
But his latest drama, โCaught by the Tides,โ which opens at the Frida Cinema today, presents a bold, reflexive remix of his preoccupations. Drawing from nearly 25 years of footage, including images from his most acclaimed films, Jiahas crafted a poignant new story with an assist from fragments of old tales. He has always been interested in how the weight of time bears down on his characters โ now his actors age in front of our eyes.
When โCaught by the Tidesโ premiered at last yearโs Cannes Film Festival, critics leaned on a handy, if somewhat inaccurate, comparison to describe Jiaโs achievement: โBoyhood,โ which followed a young actor over the course of 12 years, a new segment of the picture shot annually. But Richard Linklater preplanned his magnum opus. Jia, on the other hand, approached his film more accidentally, using the pandemic shutdown as an excuse to revisit his own archives.
โIt struck me that the footage had no linear, cause-and-effect pattern,โ Jia explained in a directorโs statement. โInstead, there was a more complex relationship, not unlike something from quantum physics, in which the direction of life is influenced and ultimately determined by variable factors that are hard to pinpoint.โ
The result is a story in three chapters, each one subtly building emotionally from the last. In the first, it is 2001, as Qiaoqiao (Zhao Tao) lives in Datong, where she dates Bin (Li Zhubin). Early on, Qiaoqiao gleefully sings with friends, but it will be the last time we hear her voice. Itโs a testament to Zhaoโs arresting performance that many viewers may not notice her silence. Sheโs so present even without speaking, her alert eyes taking in everything, her understated reactions expressing plenty.
Young and with her whole life ahead of her, Qiaoqiao longs to be a singer, but her future is short-circuited by Binโs text announcing that heโs leaving to seek better financial opportunities elsewhere. He promises to send word once heโs established himself, but we suspect she may never see this restless, callous schemer again. Not long after, Bin ghosts Qiaoqiao, prompting her to journey after him.
โCaught by the Tidesโ richly rewards viewers familiar with Jiaโs filmography with scenes and outtakes from his earlier movies. Zhao, who in real life married Jia more than a decade ago, has been a highlight of his movies starting with his 2000 breakthrough โPlatform,โ and so when we see Qiaoqiao at the start of โCaught by the Tides,โ weโre actually watching footage shot around that time. (Jiaโs 2002 drama โUnknown Pleasuresโ starred Zhao as a budding singer named Qiaoqiao. Li also appeared in โUnknown Pleasures,โ as well as subsequent Jia pictures.)
But the uninitiated shouldnโt feel intimidated to begin their Jia immersion here. Those new to his work will easily discern the filmโs older footage, some of it captured on grainy DV cameras, while newer material boasts the elegant, widescreen compositions that have become his specialty. โCaught by the Tidesโ serves as a handy primer on Jiaโs fascination with Chinaโs political, cultural and economic evolution, amplifying those dependable themes with the benefit of working across a larger canvas of a quarter-century.
Still, by the time Qiaoqiao traverses the Yangtze River near the Three Gorges Dam โ a controversial construction project that imperiled local small towns and provided the backdrop for Jiaโs 2006 film โStill Lifeโ โ the directorโs fans may feel a bittersweet sense of dรฉjร vu. We have been here before, reminded of his earlier characters who similarly struggled to find love and purpose.
The filmโs second chapter, which takes place during 2006, highlights Qiaoqiaoโs romantic despair and, separately, Binโs growing desperation to make a name for himself. (This isnโt the first Jia drama in which characters dabble in criminal activity.) By the time we arrive at the finale, set during the age of COVID anxiety, their inevitable reunion results in a moving resolution, one that suggests the ebb and flow of desire but, also, the passage of timeโs inexorable erosion of individuals and nations.
Indeed, itโs not just Zhao and Li who look different by the end of โCaught by the Tidesโ but Shanxi Province itself โ now a place of modern supermarkets, sculpted walkways and robots. Unchecked technological advancement is no longer a distant threat to China but a clear and present danger, dispassionately gobbling up communities, jobs and Qiaoqiaoโs and Binโs dreams. When these two former lovers see each other again, a lifetime having passed on screen, they donโt need words. In this beautiful summation work, Jia has said it all.
‘Caught by the Tides’
In Mandarin, with subtitles
Not rated
Running time: 1 hour, 51 minutes
Playing: In limited release at Lumiere Cinema at the Music Hall, Beverly Hills; the Frida Cinema, Santa Ana
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