Sunday, 22 February 2026

From the Archive: On HUMAN CAPITAL (Paolo Virzi, Italy, 2013) - Tom Ryan talks to Stephen Amidon &, in Part 2, director Paolo Virzi, about the first screen adaptation of Amidon's novel.


The 2013 Italian film Il capitale umano / Human Capital represents the fortuitous 
meeting of two complementary sensibilities. One belongs to novelist Stephen Amidon (above), on whose 2004 novel (also titled Human Capital) it was based; the other to the film’s director and co-writer, Paolo Virzi. Both the novel and the film are political thrillers consistent with concerns evident in their creators’ other work. 

Amidon (who’s also reviewed films for The Sunday Times and The Financial Times) is the author of eight novels – Human Capital was the fifth – as well as two collections of short stories, the second of which, Echolocation, is due for publication later this year [see the author's website]. Most of his work deals with the ways in which social forces frame the trajectory of our lives. Underpinning the noirish thrust of The Primitive (1996), Security (2009) and The Real Justine (2015) is an empathetic humanist impulse that believes that everyone has their reasons. That assessing life simply on the basis of surface appearances is never enough. And the same concern pervades the gripping social drama of novels such as The New City (2000) and his latest, Locust Lane (2023). 

 

It’s a theme that also runs through Peter Chelsom’s 2020 adaptation of Security, which transfers the Connecticut setting of Amidon’s novel to the Italian seaside town of Forte dei Marmi. The film was made for an Italian company (Indiana Production), shot in Italian and subsequently picked up by Netflix for an international release (and can still be found there). As Chelsom put it in Variety, “It’s a kind of companion piece to Human Capital in that it’s both the same novelist and the same producers. Similarly, it starts with a crime that takes the duration of the film to solve. And while Human Capital asks the question ‘What is the price of a human life?’ Security asks, ‘What is the price we pay for security in an ever-threatened world?’”

 


Now in his mid-60s, like Amidon, writer-director Virzi (above) has made 17 films to date. Human Capital is the eleventh and his most recent is Cinque Secondi/Five Seconds (2025), which is likely to turn up at this year’s Italian Film Festival. As is evident in films such as 
Caterina in the City (2003), which pivots on the chasm between those who live within the circle of power in Italian society and those who exist outside it, and the family saga, The First Beautiful Thing (2010), Virzi shares Amidon’s commitment to his characters’ humanity and view of their social circumstances. 
 

As the filmmaker explains in Part 2 of this feature, in the following interview, the pair never met in person until after the movie was finished. But they got on, leading to Amidon collaborating (with several other screenwriters, even if not especially successfully) on the screenplay for Virzi’s first English-language feature, The Leisure Seekers (2017), starring Donald Sutherland and Helen Mirren.

 

                                                                        ***

 

Amidon’s Human Capital takes place in a superficially comfortable Connecticut in the spring of 2001 (the date becomes significant). A compelling story of our times, it winds together the experiences of three families implicated in the hit-and-run killing of a cyclist. As it does so, it also paints a savagely sardonic portrait of the workings of contemporary capitalism.

 

Virzi’s Human Capital shifts the setting to the wealthy Brianza region in northern Italy, changes the names of the characters, rearranges the chronology of the plot – the cyclist’s death happens at the start rather than a third of the way in – and adjusts the dramatic emphases accordingly.

 

Intriguingly, the respectable 2019 remake of Human Capital,  (available for rental on Amazon Prime) written by Oren Moverman and directed in the US by Marc Meyers, returns the drama to Amidon’s Connecticut setting. But, acknowledging the writers of Virzi’s film in the closing credits, it also begins with the cyclist’s death, its subsequent withholding of information about who was behind the wheel of the car lending the film a whodunnit thread.

 

                                                                        ***

 

I interviewed Amidon by email and Virzi by Skype late in 2013, for a feature I was writing about Human Capital for the arts pages of The Australian.    

Interview with Stephen Amidon

 

“I think Stephen must be genetically Italian.” 

(Peter Chelsom, Variety, June 22, 2020)

 

“I sometimes feel I should borrow Trollope's How We Live Now as the title for all my books.” (Stephen Amidon)

TR: Why does it take an Italian production to adapt your novel to the screen?

 

Stephen Amidon: Well you might ask. My books have always done pretty well in Italy for reasons I do not fully understand, so it was not entirely surprising. But, still, the fact that Paolo Virzi was able to make a successful adaptation of this very American story remains a source of great surprise to me. I think the fact that the book's themes – money, greed, the often-crippling love for our children – are universal might explain a lot. But I also put it down to plain old serendipity.

 

When did the filmmakers approach you? What promises did they make to persuade you to release the rights? 

 

I received a call from an Italian writer/journalist named Antonio Monda in the summer of 2011 saying that Paolo wanted to talk to me. Antonio is something of a celebrity in America – he is a real rainmaker who runs an actual salon in his New York City apartment, where famous people gather every Sunday. (I've never been). Anyway, Paolo wrote me a charming and intelligent letter with his take on the story, and that was all it took. He got it. I'd seen two of his movies already so I knew he was good. I must confess, the idea intrigued me more than worried me.

 


You must feel gratified by the film’s nomination for the best foreign film Oscar?

Very gratified, especially for Paolo, the actors and screenwriters Francesco Bruni and Francesco Piccolo. They really worked very hard and with great inspiration, so any recognition they can get is well-deserved. I am also pleased that they were able to win the Davide di Donatello award – Italy's Oscar – over stiff competition that included Paolo Sorrentino's The Great Beauty (2013), which won last year's Academy Award for Best Foreign Film.

 

Do you see all of the characters as victims in one way or another?

 

Absolutely. I believe that capitalism in its current iteration really does have a tendency to distort human behaviour and relationships. As Herbert Marcuse pointed out, all these technological breakthroughs of the past 100 years should be decreasing the amount or work and stress we are experiencing, and yet it seems to be having the opposite effect, with crippling debt and longer work weeks and ever- expanding material aspiration. It's crazy. And then there is the notion of false needs. Drew [Dino in the film] has a perfectly good life which he almost destroys because he wants more; Quint [Giovanni] is a multi-millionaire and yet he works himself nearly to death to accumulate more wealth. It’s like they are bewitched by money.

 

What do you feel about the changes Paolo Virzi and his co-writers have made?

For example, the different ending?

 

I really don't have a strong opinion about this, though I know others do. To be honest, though, I sort of liked it. I feel like I can be somewhat brutal with my poor characters – it's nice to see someone else cutting them some slack.

 

And the shift of the accident from Chapter 10 to the film’s opening?

 

I think one of the master strokes of the screenplay is the way it re-arranges certain plot elements to make the story more coherent as a filmed drama. The relocation of the accident to the opening scene is one of these inspired changes.

The variation to your structuring of the story? [While the novel moves back and forth between four characters, with occasional temporal overlaps, the film rewinds events through the experiences of three of them before, like the book, bringing them together for the “Final Chapter”]

 

I actually wrote a screenplay of Human Capital for an American producer many years ago, and I feel that I was in some ways defeated by my own narrative structure. The changes made by Paolo, Bruni and Piccolo had me slapping my forehead. Of course!

The transformation of Carla’s project from a cinema one to a theatre one? 

 

I was so taken with Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi's performance that I hardly noticed it. It didn't really change the plot at all, so I was fine with it.

 

Valeria Bruni-Tedeschi, Human Capital

The reduction of Luca’s uncle/your David to a peripheral character?

This was disappointing, and I know Paolo would have liked to do more with David. He was one of the book's main characters, and also one of my favourite ones. To be honest, I think it was simply a matter of fitting him into the running-time.

 

The film, I think, makes the adult characters in the film, especially the male ones, much harder-edged, less sympathetic than they are in the way you flesh them out in the novel. Are you comfortable with this?

 

I’m not being coy, but that's a very difficult question for me to answer. I've always been fond of this book and its characters, so when I saw the movie I was sort of like a child sitting in wonder, rather than a film critic (a job I held in London for several years, as it happens).  

 

My point is I brought so much knowledge about them to my experience that I felt very sympathetic toward them. But I see your point. People talk about film and novels in the same breath, but they are such incredibly different media. I believe a lot of the very astute points you are making have more to do with the demands of producing a movie rather than deep aesthetic choices. Characters have to be more vivid, more external. Their dramas are performed, rather than inwardly felt. This can lead to them becoming more extreme. 

 

I see your novel as “a story of our times”. How does that sit with your feelings about it?

My main comment is thank you – that was my intent. I've always tried to follow Tom Wolfe's suggestion that novelists need to provide a snapshot of the times in which they find themselves trapped. I sometimes feel I should borrow Trollope's The Way We Live Now [1875] as the title for all my books.

 

In terms of its ironic function, do you think the film changes anything by replacing 9/11 with a downturn in the Italian economy?

My American editor once remarked that Human Capital is the only novel he knows that uses 9/11 as a deus ex machina – a hedge-fund manager bets on markets to fall and benefits mightily when the Twin Towers tumble, allowing him to save his career and rescue his family.  

 

But, yes, I think that the film might lose a little not having this hugely ironic signpost, but makes up for it by having Valeria deliver that incredible money line (which I did not write) to her husband as they prepare for their victory party:  "You bet on the downfall of this country, and you won." 

 

If you’d been directing the film, what would you have done differently?

 

I would have failed!  


                                                                        ***


Part Two - Tom's conversation with Paolo Virzi will be published shortly

Friday, 20 February 2026

Sixty Years of Art Cinema 1960-2020 : Bruce Hodsdon continues his series - 6(47) - China - Part 2: The Shanghai Revival (1947-1949)

Poster for Spring in a Small Town

Fei Mu b.1906, Zheng Junli b.1911, Xie Jin b.1923, Xie Tieli b.1925

******************************************

In the 33 years from the first Chinese produced feature film in 1916 to the Revolution in 1949 there were two so-called 'golden ages' of film production. The first was in 1932-7 during the Japanese invasion first of Manchuria in 1931 and the takeover of the Chinese part of Shanghai after occupying the Chinese section of the city. For whatever reason, the Japanese permitted, even encouraged, local film production. Leftist filmmakers had set-up as the Communist-dominated Film Group in 1932 and produced notable productions in the two major film studios in social realist style although 3 out of 4 films released were foreign, chiefly American. The studios became the training grounds for a generation of  artists who dominated filmmaking into the 1950s and 1960s.

When full-scale war with Japan began in mid-1937 more direct patriotic appeals superseded anti-Japanese allusions (Clark 14).  Some of these filmmakers moved to Hong Kong after the Japanese  occupation. The second ‘golden age’ was in the postwar years to 1949. Paul Clark comments that “Chinese films in the late 1940s reflected Chinese concerns to an extent seldom seen in the artistic innovation of the previous decades” (15). Tony Rayns and Scott Meek designate a Chinese film from the 30s and 40s as “a site for a clash of ideologies.”

Every film, like every novel and every newspaper article, had to have a position on the key issues of the day: whether to resist Japanese aggression, what to do about widespread poverty and corruption. If they were progressive, then Kuomintang censorship would prevent it being expressed explicitly; it then became implicit, and the audience response completed the intended meaning. Left-wing films of the period prior to 1949 were essentially divisive; their emphasis was on society's gaps and contradictions (and their refusal to paper them over) was deliberately calculated to polarise reactions.

Poster for The Spring River Flows East

The first of the three key films in the short-lived revival of Shanghai cinema, 
Spring River Flows East/Yijiang chunshui xiang dong lei (1947) a film in two parts running 190 minutes, as Clark puts it, “the  Chinese equivalent of Gone with the Wind” -  a melodramatic story of a single family during and after the wartime resistance to Japan, a collaboration between Zheng Junli and Cai Chusheng as writer-directors.  An unprecedented success, Spring River ran for three months in Shanghai to a total audience of almost three-quarters of a million. It was remarked at the time by a critic in a Guangzhou periodical quoted by McGrath, that audiences throughout China having recently experienced the horrors of the Japanese occupation, were receptive to a growing ambition to employ what the critic referred to as a “new [social]  realism” with the ambition not only to expose society’s ills but to propel history forward into the revolutionary future through the depiction of the “shared suffering of our national history.” This contrasts with a subsequent valuation by a Chinese film historian who found the “cultural politics ofSpring River Flows East  “decidedly conservative” and its style to be “classic melodrama,” having  “not much to do with cinematic realism.” McGrath then quotes Kristin Thompson’s argument that such discrepancies “indicate strongly the historical nature of perceptions of realism,” her primary example being the incomprehension upon its initial release, of Jean Renoir’s The Rules of the Game in 1939, that it was only after such films as Bicycle Thieves (1948) had taught audiences new viewing skills, that Rules also won widespread acclaim as a realist film (115).

Fei Mu

Although unrecognised as such at the time, the second key film of the Shanghai late 40s revival was 
Spring in a Small Town/Xiao cheng chi chun (1948) directed by veteran Fei Mu (1906-1951) “with an assurance and stylistic innovation that sets it apart from its contemporaries” (Clark 18). Spring in a Small Town was released only months after Spring River Flows East but to much more modest success at the box office, the simple story of a love triangle was criticised “for being bourgeois, decadent and out of touch with the times.”  McGrath notes that “it was almost entirely forgotten after the establishment a year later of the PRC - at least until the post-Mao era when it was not only rediscovered and praised belatedly as a masterpiece but was famously selected as the greatest Chinese film of all time in a 2005 poll of critics conducted by the Hong Kong Film Awards on the centenary of Chinese filmmaking. “ Its rediscovery provided Chinese filmmakers and critics of the 1980s and beyond with a newly excavated lineage of Chinese art cinema that helped legitimise the rising auteurs of Chinese post-socialist realism in the post-Mao era of “reform and opening” (116).  

Spring in a Small Town

At the time of its appearance, McGrath suggests it would have been categorised in the category of 
wenyi  or “literary art” genre.  Set in spring of 1946 the emotional intensity of a love triangle played out in a family compound partially ruined by war, a potentially melodramatic mode is displaced by “the originality and brilliance [of Fei Mu’s] “proto-modernist experiment” in ambiguity” - naturalistic performance and detached long take camera style - condemned during the Mao era for its lack of political progressiveness.  McGrath analyses Spring in a Small Town as an exemplary instance of what he calls apophatic realism (see part 2) - “which uses negation or absence to point to the real beyond representation.” He argues that apophatic gaps can be found in [Shanghai] films of the 30s “that subverted classical cinema norms through their sometimes jarring mixing of genres and their lack of narrative closure [while] Spring in a Small Town […] in its elliptical narrative as well as its long-take style, in retrospect,[…] fits well into postwar global art cinema” (119). Fei Mu’s classic was respectfully remade in 2001, after a ten year lay-off, by Tian Zhuangzhuang  (Horse Thief, and the masterful ‘scar film’ The Blue Kite)

If Spring River Flows East, McGrath writes, constituted a look back at the traumas of the recent historical past and Spring in a Small Town seemed to be stuck in a cyclical present in which temporality had collapsed and human desire thwarted, Crows and Sparrows on the contrary was one of those rare films that seemed so much to coincide with a tectonic transformation in human life that watching the film feels almost like watching history hurtle before our eyes. Like Spring River Flows East, the film drew massive audiences, with an estimated 287,000 viewing it in Shanghai alone (144).

Poster for Crows and Sparrows

The production of 
Crows and Sparrows/Nu ya yu me ch’ueh (1949) was begun in 1948 at the leftist Kunlun Studios but was halted by the Kuomintang authorities when they discovered that the submitted script was not being followed and was heavily anti-KMT. In the interval it was rewritten by the director Zheng Junli with the stellar cast of popular veteran actors (6 are also credited as the writers) to be even more hostile to the KMT. The film was actually completed and released after the CP had seized power. Set mostly inside a single Shanghai tenement house occupied by representatives of various social classes in urban China - the intellectuals, petty bourgeoisie or small merchants, and finally the truly propertyless workers, the landlord being a villainous Nationalist section chief who had pushed aside the rightful owner, making the film a national allegory and as well a work of social realism.

‘The Seventeen years’ (1949-66)

The period from the establishment of the People’s Republic of China (PRC) in 1949 to Mao’s death and the fall of the Gang of Four in 1976, is generally referred to as the Mao era subdivided, as noted above,  during which the transition from capitalism to state socialism was consolidated and various experiments in the name of Communism were carried out. The Great Proletarian Revolution (1966-76) began with renewed revolutionary activity and intense grassroots struggle, later settled into a more doctrinaire, top-down political and cultural situation (see part 3 to follow).                                                                                                                     

 Clark comments that films continued to evolve on a number of levels into the 50s to the mid 60s both inside and outside the studios, “feature films reaching a level of maturity that matched the growth of the industry (94).” Clark devotes a chapter to outlining the development of six genres: minority peoples (given increased screen presence after 1949), the revolution, contemporary Chinese life, adaptations of operas, dance dramas and musicals, May the Fourth adaptations, and historical films; he indicates that his selection was not exhaustive. Genres shared stylistic features such as common character types and avoidance of naturalism or critical realism and, as noted above, the writer was given equal importance with the director in the credits, extended weight given to dialogue in theatrically presented scenes.

In the revolutionary cinema of the Seventeen years partly under the influence of Soviet socialist realism, Chinese revolutionary cinema developed an arsenal of codified stereotypes that (as in classic Hollywood genres such as the western) both entertained mass audiences and reinforced conventionalised and affectively charged collective values regarding morality, behavior, politics, and community belonging. The eventual sedimentation of such codes into clichés coincided in the bureaucratisation of political rule in general and the lessening of the ideological fervour of the revolution. This danger was answered politically by the Cultural Revolution, which in cinema eventually resulted in a striking new phenomenon, the films based on the revolutionary “model works” of opera and ballet. - McGrath p.161   

In the first seventeen years of the People's Republic, cinema became, [by contrast with the pre- and post-war Shanghai film periods], unificatory in spirit. The liberated film industry set out to address the largest possible audience, including people in rural areas who had previously had little or no access to cinema. Films showed a determination to confront social problems constructively from the superstitions and fears of the tradition-bound peasant population to the constant risk of losing sight of the ideals on which the Communist party was founded. Films were subject to all the vagaries and shifts in government policy, as in any socialist country. The Hundred Flowers campaign aimed at China's intellectuals in 1956-7, encouraged film-makers to try new subjects and styles. Two years later, the Great Leap Forward campaign had the same film-makers producing naive and optimistic celebrations of breakthroughs in industrial productivity. And when it became clear that the Great Leap was an economic disaster, leaving a high proportion of the population disillusioned and short of food, the film industry came through with its share of morale boosters, designed to rekindle the idealism after the Communist victory. (Rayns and Meek)

The China Film Distribution and Exhibition Company, in little more than a decade operating through provincial, city and country offices, massively increased exhibition units across China : from 646 theatres in 1949 to 20,363 units in 1965 with 13,997 projection teams showing films on 16mm to peasant communities in the countryside, total annual attendance growing in 15 years from 139 million to 4.6 billion. A film school, the Beijing Film Academy, was established in 1956. In July 1949 the First National Congress of film and literature professionals “consecrated Mao Zedong’s ‘Talks at the Yan’an Forum’ as the guiding principles for works in art and literature.” ‘Worker-peasant-soldier types’ in what Mao called “revolutionary realism” became an official mandate.” The filmmakers were far from uniform in background and outlook; key members of the 1930s underground left-wing movement, previously non-aligned employees of private Shanghai studios, and members of theatre troupes from Yan’an and the army, they borrowed formal and narrative strategies from traditional drama and literature, and in Soviet and Hollywood films of the 1930s and 40s (Esther Yau 694).

Xie Tieli

The early 60s were years of difficult social conditions with widespread famine during which the Soviet Union also withdrew financial and technological assistance. Although the effects of the Anti-Rightist backlash during 1957-9 against the outspoken Hundred Flowers critics of the Party line were still being felt in the film industry, some of the best films of the classical revolutionary period (1949-64) were made. Clark considers that the problems of adapting May Fourth authors was most clearly shown in the adaptation of the 1929 novella 
February/Eryue  chosen in part for its martyred Communist author’s would-be revolutionary credentials.  Scripted and directed with assurance by Xie Tieli 1925-2015), who had worked as assistant on the condemned Lin Family Shop (1959), the morality of the open story ending of Early Spring in February/Zaochun eryue (1963)was attacked for its modernist ambiguity despite the attempt by Xie Tieli to make the ending more positive (112). Spring was actually shown widely in a number of cities as an salutary example of “bourgeois morality” (Yau, Nowell-Smith ed. 696).

Xie Jin

Third Generation director 
Xie Jin (1923-2008) is regarded as a main transitional figure between the first and second generation of classical Chinese cinema and the fourth and fifth generations, in the new waves of the seventies and eighties (post Cultural Revolution). He ensured his popularity (and hence political survival) through “demonstrated exemplary skills in adapting traditional [Chinese melodrama] and Hollywood type narrative and characterisation strategies to revolutionary contexts” (Yau 696). Ma Ning identifies the melodramatic tradition as “typically Chinese” but in Xie Jin's case well-woven into the narrative bi-polar structure that blends history with fiction or legend, the personal and the political. This structure also enabled him “to establish an almost endless set of contrasts in terms of setting, character traits, and actions.” Xie Jin's films exhibit a strong social dimension and sensitivity to fluctuating political issues that functioned “as the catalyst for his creative activity.”  Xie achieved a critical edge in some of his films indirectly evoking the arbitrariness and absurdity of ethical-political criteria with which the Party patriarchy used to divide people into political insiders and outsiders. Two Actresses and The Legend of Tianyun Mountain, “became a source of inspiration for the younger generation of Chinese filmmakers.” The rebellious Fifth Generation “went much further in breaking away from the Chinese melodramatic tradition in which Xie Jin operated. (Ma Ning 15).

Paul Clark notes that in Chinese cinema “prominence was always given to the writer over the director in film credits and also in reviews.” Part of the reason, Clark suggests, was probably the pre-production censorship vetting the script rather than the finished film.” He further points out that “this emphasis on the written word had been strong in Chinese filmmaking since the 1930s. “It reflected the customary attitude of educated Chinese in granting more respect to the written word and its offspring, calligraphy and painting, than to stage art, for example” (94-5). The fluidity of Xie Jin's mise-en-scene in his best films stood in contrast to the theatricality of films directed by most of his peers and older directors in long dialogue-driven scenes filmed, tableau style, with a static camera carrying the main weight of character and story development.


Xie
 showed a penchant for survival from the 50s through to the new wave of the Fifth Generation of filmmakers and the emergence of an art cinema in China in the 80s. He directed at least 20 features 1957-2001. His greatest achievement, praised in the West for its mise-en-scene, is Two Actresses/Two Stage Sisters (1964) which Xie directed and co-wrote with Lin Gu and Xu Jin. Attacked for “advocating reconciliation of the social classes it was one of several films singled out during the Cultural Revolution and screened around the country as an example of “a poisonous weed.” Many filmmakers from the pre-revolutionary years were sent to work in the countryside. Mark Cousins refers to Xie at one stage being consigned to cleaning toilets. During the decade, however, he also worked on one of the dozen “approved” revolutionary operas and ballets, the only features that were made during 1966-72. The Legend of Tianyun Mountain (1979), directed by Xie cited and written by Lu Yanzhou, “marks a decisive break with the propagandist tradition of the  Cultural Revolution and of the earlier Anti-Rightist campaign” (Kaplan 13). Yet despite this apparently unhealthy attention for “bourgeois tendencies” in their more recent films both Xie Tieli and Xie Jin were invited to direct the first two of the five model of modernised revolutionary operas. This would seem to be because, as third generation directors, ”they were relatively young and not tainted with involvement in the jealousies of 1930s Shanghai or wartime Yan’an’s Lu Xun Art Academy and were therefore regarded as more pliable” than the thirties Old Guard (Clark 142) exemplified in the eyes of Jiang Quing and her allies, by Zheng.

Zheng Junli

Zheng Junli 
(1911-69) was born into a poor family and did not complete his formal education at junior high school level but self-developed his language skills particularly in Russian, using dictionaries in painstakingly translating Constantin Stanislavski’s book on acting. Zheng also wrote Art History of World Movies in which he compared western films to those of the Soviet Union.

His entry into acting on the stage in his teens and subsequently into filmmaking rising to stardom playing the love interest opposite the legendary Ruan Lingyu. After the War he shifting focus to the role of writer-director on two classics The Spring River Flows East and Crossroads, q.v., the latter dynamically welcoming the establishment of the new Communist government. When he turned to directing comedy in A Married Couple/Women fufu chi jian (1951) adapted from a best-selling comic novel about the trials and tribulations of a Party cadre who returns to the city with a countryfied wife. “In a sense […] a parable of the Communist Party’s own return to an urban context after years in Yan’an, ”Zheng as co-scriptwriter was accused by Party critics of catering to “the vulgar petit bourgeoise tastes of unreformed Shanghai audiences” and the film was banned from public release (Clark 51).

Zheng had used his administrative position to support the making of The Life of Wu Xun/Wu Xunzhuan (1950) the history of the production and criticism of the best known of modern Chinese films which, Clark suggests, “offers a case study in the problems of transition from Shanghai to Yan’an (45).” As a cherished project of a number of prominent figures in the Shanghai film world its difficulties contributed to the difficulties the whole industry experienced in the early 50s. While 518 films made during the 17 years were put into ‘cold storage, Wu Xun was shown in the ten years of the CR  as negative teaching material’ (ibid 145). Wu Xun is an historical subject about a poor peasant folk hero, an exemplary story of an early effort to educate the poor. Underlying the two year controversy “was not simply a problem of the relations between the new cultural regime and Shanghai artists” but also ongoing disagreement with Mao and Jian Quing on the initial portrayal of the revered revolutionary surrendering to the Qings, the last imperial dynasty, as a ‘bourgeois’ landlord and educator, even after Zheng and Sun Yu as the co-writers, compromised by substituting another historical figure for the revolutionary Wu Xun.  

Poster for The Life of Wu Xun

In the end the second 
Wu Xun film made “as atonement” was banned, the damage done despite Zheng’s “guilt” for his part in this failure being partly alleviated by the positive reaction in 1959 to his two subsequent biographical pictures both also starring Zhao Dan: Nieh Erh based on the fictionalisation of the life of a composer, and Lin Zexu, three years in production, also like Wu Xun, set in the 19th century with “melodramatic exaggeration of the good or evil on each side of the Opium Wars in avoiding the pitfalls of the Wu Xun project” (65).

 Zheng, along with the great actor Zhao Dan, became the victims of a personal vendetta by Mao’s wife, former actress Jiang Qing in 1966, their homes ransacked for evidence of corruption, Zheng’s family only allowed to visit him on his death-bed in 1969. His progressive co-director on The Spring River Flows East, Cai Chusheng, also died under the pressure of militant harassment at age sixty-two; one estimate of those from the Shanghai film circle puts the figure at over 30 such deaths following imprisonment and torture. Ironically, a few of the survivors of this cultural witch-hunt were able to return to work in the early 1970s when their experience and skills were needed by the perpetuators of these excesses” (ibid 133).  

*****************************

Previous entries in this series can be found if you click the following links

 

Sixty Years of International Art Cinema: 1960-2020 - Tables and Directors Lists to Accompany Bruce Hodsdon's Series

 

Notes on canons, methods, national cinemas and more

 

Part One - Introduction

Part Two - Defining Art Cinema

Part Three - From Classicism to Modernism

Part Four - Authorship and Narrative

Part Five - International Film Guide Directors of the Year, The Sight and Sound World Poll, Art-Horror

Part Six (1) - The Sixties, the United States and Orson Welles

Part Six (2) - Hitchcock, Romero and Art Horror

Part Six (3) - New York Film-makers - Elia Kazan & Shirley Clarke  

Part Six (4) - New York Film-makers - Stanley Kubrick Creator of Forms

Part Six (5) ‘New Hollywood’ (1) - Arthur Penn, Warren Beatty, Pauline Kael and BONNIE AND CLYDE

Part Six (6) Francis Ford Coppola: Standing at the crossroads of art and industry

Part 6(7) Altman

6(8) Great Britain - Joseph Losey, Lindsay Anderson, Karel Reisz, Richard Lester, Peter Watkins, Barney Platts-Mills

6(9) France - Part One The New Wave and The Cahiers du Cinema Group

6(10) France - Part Two - The Left Bank/Rive Gauche Group and an Independent

6(11) France - Part Three - Young Godard

6(12) France - Part Four - Godard:Visionary and Rebel

6 (13) France Part 5 Godard with Gorin, Miéville : Searching for an activist voice

6(14) France Part 6 - Creator of Forms - Bresson 

6 (15) France Part 6 - Creator of Forms - Jacques Tati

6 (16) - Part 6 - Creator of Forms - Carl Th Dreyer

6 (17) - Italy and Luchino Visconti

6(18 - Italy and Roberto Rossellini - Part One

6(19) - Rossellini, INDIA and the new Historical realism

6(20) - Rossellini in Australia

6 (21) - Italy - Michelangelo Antonioni

6 (22) - Italy - Federico Fellini, Ermanno Olmi

6 (23) - Italy - Pasolini, Rosi

6 (24) - Interregnum - Director/Auteur/Autoren

6 (25) West Germany

6 (26) - Alexander Kluge Part One

6 (27) - Alexander Kluge Part Two

6 (28) - The Young German Cinema: Reitz, Schlondorff, von Trotta

6(29 ) West German Cinema - Fassbinder

6 (30) West German Cinema - Straub & Huillet

6(31) - New Spanish Cinema

6 (32) - Bunuel in the 60s

6 (33) Nordic Cinemas - Bergman and Widerberg

6 (34) - Scandinavia - Sjoman, Zetterling, Troell

6 (35) - East Germany - Konrad Wolf, Frank Beyer

6 (36) - East Central Europe - Poland

6(37) - East Central Europe - Hungary Part One

6 (38) East Central Europe - Miklos Jancso

6 (39) East Central Europe - Czechoslovakia

6 (40) East Central Europe - Yugoslavia

6 (41) - The Soviet Union

6 (42) - Asia - Japan - Part One

6 (43) - Japan - Part Two

6 (44) - Japan - Part Three - Shohei Imamura

6 (45) Asia - India Pt 1 - Satyajit Ray

6 (46) Asia - India Pt 2- Ghatak, Dutt, Sen, Parallel Cinema

6 (47) Asia - China - Part 1: Mapping Chinese Cinema 

6(47) Asia- China - Part 2: The Shanghai Revival (1947-1949)

6 (48) - Brazil Pt 1- Cinema Novo, dos Santos, Rocha

6 (49) Brazil Pt 2 - de Andrade, Diegues, Guerra

6(50) - Latin America - Argentina

6 (51) - Chile - Allende and Popular Unity

6 (52) - Latin America - Bolivia, Jorge Sanjines