San Francisco International Film Festival 24 April - 08 May 2008

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FILMS/

UP THE YANGTZE

Documentaries
Canada, 2007, 93 minutes

SHOWTIMES

Sun, May 4 / 12:30 / Kabuki / UPTH04K
Tue, May 6 / 5:45 / Kabuki / UPTH06K
Thu, May 8 / 8:55 / PFA / UPTH08P

CREDITS

dir
Yung Chang
prod
Mila Aung-Thwin, Germaine Ying Gee Wong, John Christou
cam
Wang Shi Qing
editor
Hannele Halm
mus
Olivier Alary
source
Zeitgeist Films, 247 Centre Street, 2nd Fl, New York, NY 10013. FAX: 212-274-1644. EMAIL: nadja@zeitgeistfilms.com
Up the Yangtze

Watch

On a cruise ship gliding up the Yangtze River, European and North American tourists get a relaxing firsthand view of changing China. The perspective is markedly different, however, for two Chinese teenagers working on the boat. Chen Bo (assigned the gringo-friendly name Jerry) is a good-looking, supremely self-confident urban dude with a quick appreciation for the newly introduced practice of tipping. Downstairs in the galley, meanwhile, the shy country girl Yu Shui (aka Cindy) grapples with the demeaning drudgery of dirty dishes. Yu Shui would much rather be in school, but it’s not in the cards. The imminent completion of the massive Three Gorges Dam, one of the biggest and most controversial engineering projects in human history, will submerge the meager plot of land on which her dirt-poor family ekes out its existence. Not only is there no money for her schooling, her parents will need a chunk of her check to get by. The dam is a source of pride for many Chinese—even a shop owner in a village destined to disappear beneath the water refers to “sacrificing the little family for the big family.” But reality trumps philosophy: voice cracking, the same man laments, “China is too hard for common people.” Chinese-Canadian filmmaker Yung Chang displays a lyrical eye for landscape and detail that doesn’t shy from hard truths. His haunting film leaves us mourning what is lost and wondering what is gained. Alas, progress is like a ship steaming up a river: There is no way but forward.

—Michael Fox

This film is competing for a Golden Gate Award. Sponsored by San Simeon Films, the Quebec Government Office and the Goldman Environmental Prize.

 

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