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Event
China Now, program 1: Ai Weiwei's Ping'An Yueqing
China Now: Independent Visions program one: Ai Weiwei's Ping'An Yueqing
NOTE: Cinematheque members receive discount admission. For details please see http://www.sfcinematheque.org/support/membership/
With the advent of DV technology, grassroots methods of independent filmmaking in China have given rise to innovative new films and spawned an active independent filmmaking culture. Distancing themselves from prevailing ideological currents, critiquing the embrace of global capitalism, and, through the frequent use of on-screen interview and oral history, giving voice to citizens and witnesses omitted from official national narratives of growth and prosperity, these films seldom receive approval by censors and therefore cannot be screened in commercial cinemas in China. Instead, they rely on informal networks of galleries, cafes, universities and festivals which support this active and vital independent artistic activity despite the ebb and flow of government pressure and intervention. In support of the work of independent filmmakers worldwide, San Francisco Cinematheque and Cinema on the Edge, in association with the Center for Asian American Media and Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, is proud to present this series of programs of recent independent film from China. These programs highlight the work of Chinese independent filmmakers, producers and distribution networks who are dedicated to supporting formally and ideologically challenging work created outside the official Chinese film industry.
These films are vital for us to know about in the West, not just for their compelling contentthere are few more important stories to tell than China's transition to world political and cultural powerhousebut because the filmmakers are inventing new ways of mobilizing, adapting, and innovating film language under pressure of the incredibly rapid and fundamental changes Chinese society is undergoing. Ai Weiwei's intensely engaged hyper-journalistic camera (Ping'An Yueqing); Sniadecki, Huang and Xu's genre-defying performance/documentary art hybrid work (Yumen); and Chen Zhou and Zhi Jun's visually playful experimentalism (I Am Not Not Not Chen Zhou and Dismantling Clematis): all interrogate how cinema art can and should stand against the real, all stretch cinema art under the pressure of seemingly un-representable new Chinese realities, and all invent images and sounds that try to keep up with a present that is changing before our eyes, one that is shaping our own future at the same time. (Shelly Kraicer, co-organizer of China Now: Independent Visions & Steve Polta, San Francisco Cinematheque)
In support of these heroic grassroots film creators, Cinematheque is thrilled to present a concentrated one-day, three-program series celebrating this important and innovative cinema.
2pm: Program One: Ai Weiwei's Ping'An Yueqing
Ping'An Yueqing (2011) by Ai Weiwei: The documentaries produced by Ai Weiwei's studio are closer to investigative journalism than to conceptual art. This film in particular starts from a specific case, the mysterious death by "road accident" of a village leader, Qian Yunhui from Zhejiang province, an activist who stood up for his fellow villagers when their land was confiscated without compensation by the local government. Qian's death in 2010 quickly became a cause célèbre online in China. Ai and his team take up the challenge of determining what really happened, and dig deep into the land dispute lying behind what looks like the convenient murder of a rights advocate. The story unfolds like a thriller, but an ultra-realist one, with terrified villagers, government media spectacles, conflicting stories and a mysteriously disappearing surveillance video.
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LocationThe Victoria Theater (View)
2961 16th Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
United States
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