La Peintre
(HUA HUN) ((TAIWANESE-CHINESE))
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Pan Yuliang ... Gong Li
Pan Zanhua ... Yee Tung-shing
Chief Prostitute ... Zhang Qiongzi
Wang Shouxin ... Da Shichang
Pan Yuliang (1899-1977) is first seen at age 12, working in a brothel in a small provincial town. When the establishment's most celebrated prostie tries to retire, she's promptly murdered and Yuliang is in the running to take her place.
But on her first night, she meets local official Zanhua. They fall in love and marry, despite the fact that he has a wife already.
The couple move to the big city, and at the Shanghai Arts Institute Yuliang quickly becomes an accomplished painter. But the institute becomes the focus of demonstrations against foreign influences on Chinese art, particularly regarding the use of nude models, and the place is closed down.
Yuliang, however, wants to continue with her nude portraits and is forced to use herself as a model, sitting naked by a mirror to do so. One self-portrait, "Bathing Woman," brings her international attention when it wins a prestigious French prize.
Now separated from Zanhua, who has returned to his other wife, Yuliang moves to Paris and spends most of her life there. Back home, she's accused of "depravity" and her work is never recognized.
Pic looks like a modest production, and pretty much stands or falls on Gong's central performance. Fortunately, she makes the most of a flatly written role, and ages surprisingly convincingly from a young girl to an elderly woman.
The early scenes are reminiscent of many other Chinese films, but once the heroine establishes herself in Paris an altogether different, more mellow, tone is prevalent. This is one Chinese film to cover a 60-year time span without even mentioning the Cultural Revolution.
Gong's longtime collaborator Zhang Yimou gets a slightly mysterious credit, which translates as either "directorial planning" or "supervising director."
Though Zhang was reportedly on the set during filming, pic is the work of femme helmer Huang Shuqin, best known for "Woman, Demon, Human."
While "La Peintre" is the only title for the film outside Chinese territories , the original title translates as "Soul of a Painter," and pic is also known as "Pan Yuliang, a Woman Painter."
Camera (color), Lu Le; music, Liu Yuan; production design, Zheng Changfu, Chen Chunlin; associate producers, Huang Sungyi, Wang Shuying. Reviewed at Hoover Theater 2, Sydney, April 21, 1994. Running time: 88 MIN.
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