| Jiang Yihong, Xia Yu, Li Haibin, Guan
Xiaotong , Zhang Yijing, Qi Zhongyang, Wang Zhengjia
The beauty and tragedies of China's history
are reflected in the lives of a handful of film fans in this historical
drama. Mao Dabing (Xia Yu) is a delivery man working in a small
village in rural China during the latter days of the Cultural Revolution.
Mao is a movie fan who lives for the periodic outdoor screenings
held in the town square, but he meets a bigger buff one day when,
after he has an accident on his bicycle, he's assaulted by Ling-Ling
(Qi Zhongyang), a cute but overly excitable young woman. After she's
arrested, Ling-Ling gives the keys to her apartment to Mao and asks
him to look after her fish while she's in jail; though puzzled,
he agrees, and discovers her flat is a veritable museum of movie
memorabilia. Ling-Ling's favorite star is Zhou Xuan, a singer and
actress who was a major screen idol in the 1930s and inspired Ling-Ling
to take a stab at acting, and when Mao's curiosity gets the better
of him he starts reading Ling-Ling's diary, discovering she grew
up believing her father was a major male star of the era. However,
the truth is far less glamorous -- Ling-Ling's mother, Jiang Xuehua
(Jiang Yihong), was an attractive and talented woman who bore a
striking resemblance to Zhou Xuan and had a budding career in radio
until she became pregnant and her lover left her rather than marry
her. Declared a counter-revolutionary, Jiang's career in radio comes
to an end, and she moves to a small rural town where she strikes
up a relationship with Pan (Li Haibin), who runs the projector at
the local movie house. Jiang and Pan are happy together and eventually
marry, but when they have a son, Ling-Ling finds she's no longer
the center of attention in the household, and her life begins taking
an unexpected turn. Electric Shadows (aka Meng Ying Tong Nian) was
the first feature film from director Xiao Jiang. |