Excellent, deep drama with touches of crime/romance, mysterious and full of surprises. Slow but constant build-up, if you let it in it will pay off. A bit of cultural tourism. The leading female is outstanding. Definitely recommended to get into new chinese cinema.
I guess life accumulates and there's no way to purify it, not even by fire, hence the title, maybe. You're up and down and up and down again, but this entanglement of meaning goes deep, as it may also apply to China's severeness, where it's hard to start over and one seems to be stuck on one path by law, pride and a sense of righteousness, or maybe stubborness.
Keywords: chinacriminal underworldmob bosshandgun
Plot summary
Opening in 2001 in Datong, a former coal mining town, Bin was a mob gangster of Jianghu and when the leader was dethroned he takes over. Qiao loves Bin very much and one day to save Bin from henchmen she uses his pistol and fires it fakely. She gets arrested and imprisoned for 5 years, never being visited by Bin. When she is released she reaches out to Bin who has no interest for Qiao and is in love with another girl. 16 years later she gets a call from Bin who is in need of moral support.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Top cast
Movie Reviews
Now what?
Okay relationship drama, nothing too outstanding
"Jiang hu er nü" or "Ash Is Purest White" is a co-production between China, France and Japan from 2018, so still a relatively new release and this one has been a b ig player this awards season. Probably would have been an even bigger player without Shoplifters around. Anyway, it is a really long movie, runs for over 2 hours and 15 minutes and was written and directed by Zhangke Jia, one of China's most successful filmmakers these days. By the way looking at the title, I am truly surprised about the inclusion of an ü in the Chinese language from the linguistic perspective. But lets focus more on the film itself now. I think it is the first work I have seen by Jia and overall I liked it, but didn't love it I would say. There were occasional moments I strongly disliked that stayed in the mind such as when the central male character is attacked by the two young bikers with the metal rod and the female protagonist points at them as they are about to leave. Or another would be the card game. I struggled initially with the idea why either one would even play it, but I guess it had to do with dignity, but also the way they played it I mean what was that one card against another and that is the entire game that determines winner or loser? Oh well, maybe they just skipped the action before, but I doubt it. The two lead actors here are Tao Zhao and Fan Liao, but well, the former is definitely more in the center of the story here, even if there would not have been a movie without either. Early on they are lawless (and there is major mention of that on several occasions) before the man turns into a respected businessman, but only for a little while before his health causes major concerns due to years of alcohol abuse and he hits rock-bottom. The female always stays lawless. This also made her really unlikable to me because of some of her actions. Okay that shop owner in the train lied to her (and everybody else) and that does not really justify her actions, but at least slightly explains them. But what she does with the horny taxi rider is downight despicable, even if some feminists may like it. She makes him hopes, then steals his bike and eventually accuses him of trying to rape her. It is not a likable protagonist that much is safe. And that she wants to get back to her original man only explains it some some extent I would say. She did all this to meet him again and have him pick her up at the station, but then again she is really the epitome of a tough woman in general, but really hopelessly vulnerable when it comes to everything related to Bin. She goes to jail for him, loses 5 years of her life this way, and hearing that he has somebody else should really have resulted in her not caring for him anymore, but the opposite is the case. When he is in the wheelchair, eventually loses this one too, she is all there for him again, does all she can in a desperate attempt to get him back and even takes him to a smart doctor where he would not have gone otherwise, but instead probably ended in the gutter. The moment he gets healthier again, is able to walk and feels better finally he leaves her right away, which makes him probably the true antagonist from this film. I think the film got slightly weaker in the second half. All the scenes involving the gun in the first half were fairly interesting to watch in my opinion. But it is nonetheless a decent movie from beginnning to end. Moments of real greatness are rare, but I give this film a thumbs-up, even if the female lead did not impress me with her performance as much as I hoped she could. I certainly am grateful to see a Chinese movie being released here in Germany as I know the country is pretty prolific in filmmaking, but rarely make it their movies through to us past the big distance. Music and costumes are fine as well, but even if the film almost flew by given its running time, it could have been kept 15 minutes shorter maybe and increased the quality this way if they had cut out the right scenes. This is definitely not a film for everybody and yes despite spanning over 1.5 decades, not too much happens. But inbstead it does deliver as a character study, not just invoving the one character at its very center. It is inferior to Shoplifters in terms of the best Asian film from 2018 (not counting anime),but if you manage to open yourself up to its approach, you are in for a treat. I hope you manage. Go watch it.
Maybe I'm Not Smart Enough to Understand Chinese Movies
I'd like to think of myself as a fairly sophisticated movie goer. I studied film in school, I've seen a wide range of movies from all countries, genres, and time periods. I'm open, and even prefer, movies that are stylistically daring, experimental, and that try things that haven't been done before. But I've now watched two Chinese movies that both came out in the past year, and I'm starting to think that I'm just not smart enough to understand Chinese movies.
I admittedly had never heard of the director of "Ash Is Purest White," which in and of itself made me feel dumb, since he's apparently considered to be one of the hottest international directors currently on the scene. And apparently "Ash Is Purest White" is very much integrated into the movies he's made previously, none of which I've seen, so that didn't help. The film is also very much about the cultural changes that have happened in China in recent years, which I also don't know much about, so again, dumb ass. And this movie doesn't explain any of those changes; it assumes you already know about them.
So I was able to watch "Ash Is Purest White" just for the plot and mood, and it's not like I got nothing out of it, it's just that I spent the whole movie feeling like much was going over my head because of how little homework I'd done beforehand. It's not the movie's fault, but it still impacted my enjoyment of it.
What it does have is a mesmerizing performance by Zhao Tao, who is married to the film's director in real life (thank you Internet). She has been understandably lauded by pretty much every person who's seen this movie, so I can do little but add my own praise.
This was on Barack Obama's list of best movies of 2019, which also intrigued me. Though I will say that it was already on my watch list before Obama released his, so there, Barack Obama (and can you please come back and be our president again?)
Grade: B