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- Writer Yi'nan Diao
- 7,2 of 10 Star
- Genres Crime
- A gangster on the run sacrifices everything for his family and a woman he meets while on the lam
- Yi'nan Diao
- 1 hour, 53minute
Critics Consensus Smart and stylish, The Wild Goose Lake blends B-movie thrills with bold filmmaking choices and thought-provoking social commentary. 91% TOMATOMETER Total Count: 55 79% Audience Score User Ratings: 19 The Wild Goose Lake (Nan fang che zhan de ju hui) Ratings & Reviews Explanation The Wild Goose Lake (Nan fang che zhan de ju hui) Photos Movie Info Fleeing from the law, gangster Zenong Zhou (Ge Hu) crosses paths with an innocent-looking woman named Aiai Liu (Lun-Mei Kwei). Unbeknownst to Zhou, she holds a significant secret. Zhou must then confront the limits of what he is willing to sacrifice both for this stranger and for the family he left behind. Written and directed by award-winning filmmaker Yi'nan Diao. Rating: NR Genre: Drama Directed By: In Theaters: Mar 6, 2020 limited Runtime: 117 minutes Studio: Film Movement Cast News & Interviews for The Wild Goose Lake (Nan fang che zhan de ju hui) Critic Reviews for The Wild Goose Lake (Nan fang che zhan de ju hui) Audience Reviews for The Wild Goose Lake (Nan fang che zhan de ju hui) There are no featured audience reviews for The Wild Goose Lake (Nan fang che zhan de ju hui) at this time. See All Audience Reviews The Wild Goose Lake (Nan fang che zhan de ju hui) Quotes Movie & TV guides.
Fugitive thriller set in a gloomy and despondent China excels in visual excellence and technical wizardry, yet its plot is tedious and banal - now available on Mubi Z hou Zenong (Hu Ge) is a quiet and introspective gangster who has just been released from jail. He soon lands in hot water, after a meeting with other criminals does terribly wrong. What was intended to be a motorbike theft workshop suddenly goes violent, with a man being shot on the leg and a policeman being killed. Zenong fends for himself by using a bike lock as some sort of nunchaku. As a result, he’s once again wanted by the police. Tens of undercover cops are sent on a mission to find the elusive bandit. They go on a wild goose chase (I doubt, however, that such phrase exists in Chinese; the titular wild goose is probably coincidental). Most of the story revolves around Zenong and the “lake beauty” Liu Aiai (Gwei Lun Mei). Her accolade is a reference to the Wild Goose Lake, where where she works as a prostitute. It’s unclear whether Liu is loyal and perhaps even infatuated with Zenong, or whether she’s some sort of femme fatale about to turn him and receive the 300, 000 yuan ransom offered by the authorities. Zenong’s motives too are ambiguous. At times he seems keen to turn himself in, as long as him wife receives the large money sum. The cinematography of The Wild Goose Lake is nothing short of spectacular. The Chinese director and his loyal cinematographer Jonsong Dong – who won the Golden Bear five years ago for Black Coal, Thin Ice – know what they are doing. Almost all action takes place at night. The crammed buildings and dirty and narrow alleyways of greater Wuhan (in Central China) look like a labyrinth. There are very few windows. Artificial yellow and violet lights give the film an ethereal feel. You will feel giddy, like you have been transported onto a different planet. It reminded me a lot of Bi Gan’s Long Day’s Journey Into Night (2018). Minus the 3D. Plus some blood. The director, however, does not overplay the violence. The gruesome sequences are sparse, the most peculiar one being an umbrella killing. Instead the director focuses on the ambiguous relationship between Zenong, Liu and their associates (some of which meet a horrible death). The problem is that the plot gets a little banal and trite. And some nuts and bolts just don’t fit together. At times, I couldn’t work out who was who, and the purpose of each character. Perhaps the director intended to comment on China’s descent into criminality and despair. To be honest, I’m not entirely sure. While hypnotised by the visuals, I also lost interest in the film narrative and any underlying connotations it may have. The Wild Goose Lake premiered in competition at the 72nd Cannes International Film Festival, when this piece was originally written. Available on Mubi from February 28th for a month only.
11 wins & 16 nominations. See more awards » Videos Learn more More Like This Crime | Mystery Thriller 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 6. 7 / 10 X An ex cop and his ex partner decide to follow up on investigation of a series of murders that ended their careers and shamed them, when identical murders begin again. Director: Yi'nan Diao Stars: Fan Liao, Lun-Mei Kwei, Xuebing Wang Drama 7. 3 / 10 A feature film shot over the course of two years intended to capture the changing of the seasons along the river in a town in the Fuyang district of Hangzhou city. Xiaogang Gu Zhenyang Dong, Hongjun Du, Wei Mu Comedy 6. 5 / 10 Not everything is as it seems for Cristi, a policeman who plays both sides of the law. Embarking with the beautiful Gilda on a high-stakes heist, both will have to navigate the twists and turns of corruption, treachery and deception. Corneliu Porumboiu Vlad Ivanov, Catrinel Marlon, Rodica Lazar Romance War 7. 7 / 10 Set during occupied France, a faithless woman finds herself falling in love with a young priest. Jean-Pierre Melville Jean-Paul Belmondo, Emmanuelle Riva, Irène Tunc 6. 8 / 10 Three young people have different ideas: one wants to say goodbye to single life, one wants to have a dissipated night before marriage, and one wants to set a firm footing in Beijing. Their frantic life looks almost like a comedy. Directors: Lu Liu, Shen Zhou Suxi Ren, Yuhan Wu, Xun Liu A cop from the provinces moves to Paris to join the Anti-Crime Brigade of Montfermeil, discovering an underworld where the tensions between the different groups mark the rhythm. Ladj Ly Damien Bonnard, Alexis Manenti, Djebril Zonga Two married couples adjust to the vast social and economic changes taking place in China from the 1980s to the present. Xiaoshuai Wang Liya Ai, Jiang Du, Zhao-Yan Guo-Zhang Desperate measures are taken by a man who tries to save his family from the dark side of the law, after they commit an unexpected crime. Sam Quah Yang Xiao, Zhuo Tan, Joan Chen 6. 9 / 10 A young boxer and a call girl get caught up in a drug-smuggling scheme over the course of one night in Tokyo. Takashi Miike Becky, Bengal, Masayuki Deai Action Adventure After the death of her grandmother, Teresa comes home to her matriarchal village in a near-future Brazil to find a succession of sinister events that mobilizes all of its residents. Juliano Dornelles, Kleber Mendonça Filho Bárbara Colen, Thomas Aquino, Silvero Pereira A stormy reunion between scriptwriter Lumir with her famous mother and actress, Fabienne, against the backdrop of Fabienne's autobiographic book and her latest role in a Sci-Fi picture as a mother who never grows old. Hirokazu Koreeda Catherine Deneuve, Juliette Binoche, Ethan Hawke Certificate: 16+ 7. 6 / 10 Hoping that self-employment through gig economy can solve their financial woes, a hard-up UK delivery driver and his wife struggling to raise a family end up trapped in the vicious circle of this modern-day form of labour exploitation. Ken Loach Kris Hitchen, Debbie Honeywood, Rhys Stone Edit Storyline A gangster on the run sacrifices everything for his family and a woman he meets while on the lam. Plot Summary Add Synopsis Details Release Date: 20 March 2020 (USA) See more » Also Known As: The Wild Goose Lake Box Office Opening Weekend USA: $4, 573, 8 March 2020 Cumulative Worldwide Gross: $31, 037, 956 See more on IMDbPro » Company Credits Technical Specs See full technical specs » Did You Know? Trivia The film was shot in Wuhan dialect, instead of Standard Mandarin. Hence, most of Chinese audiences, like all foreign audiences, actually have to read the subtitles in order to understand what the characters are saying. See more » Soundtracks Rasputin Written by Frank Farian, Fred Jay and George Reyam Performed by Boney M. See more » Frequently Asked Questions See more ».
I watch a movie every two days. That is, I watch about 180 movies a year. I watch movies from almost every country in the world. I watch movies from Korea, from Spain, from Iran, from Russia, from Chile, from France, from the United States, from Romania, from Greece, from Philippines. I watch mute movies and superhero movies. I love from Tarkovsky's "Stalker" to "Guardians of the Galaxy. And I have to say that "The Wild Goose Lake" is one of the worst movies I have ever seen.
It is extremily boring, disjoint and long. Do not think you guys that I don't like long movies: My favourite movie of 2019 is "La Flor" an argentinian movie that lasts more than... 17 hours! But watching "The Wild Goose Lake" was for me like been there in front of the screen for years. Years and eons of doom in hell. Oh my god, have mercy with the foolish people like me who spend two hours of their lives watching this movie, packaged as a "visually stunning thriller" but empty and boring as hell...
I'm afraid I am going against the main stream here, as I could never connect with the movie. For those raised with Western cinema, there is a great deal of cultural diversity here, granted; there is also the fact that the whole movie is shot in semi darkness and I lost who was doing what to whom a few times. I also have to say that I thought the use of the camera and of photography/lights/colours was quite intriguing. But I'm afraid cinematic virtuosity is not enough in my view to make a good movie; namely, I found the plot just too thin to sustain a compelling movie. Cinema remains for me, first and foremost, entertainment and this was for me plain boring.
YouTube. When I saw Wong Kar-Wai's "In the Mood for Love" 2000) with Maggie Cheung - I knew we were watching a complete new cinema that would one day self-realise into epic cinema ~ epic Chinese cinema. And I have now seen that realisation in The Wild Goose Lake. This film is like a cross between Godard's Breathless and de Sica's Bicycle Thieves - and is so satisfying you could watch it upside down. It is possibly the grittiest film I have ever seen, with the urgency and cinematic style of French cinema of the 1960s - where the possibilities are endless and every new film in this genre will be waited for in anticipation.
Author: Rernardus Baka
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