REVIEW 061
his ambitious, epic melodrama from
Chinese director Wang Xiaoshuai is
delivered with historical richness and
staggering emotional gravity. Across three hours,
its story jumps back and forth between four
decades and documents significant upheavals in
modern Chinese life.
Of particular interest to Wang is how the
country’s one-child policy, designed to control
the population size and finally eliminated in 2015,
affects an ensemble of couples, their relatives and
their children. He also explores how those ripples
extend to years of rage and regret after two parents,
Liyun (Yong Mei) and Yaojun (Wang Jingchun),
fall foul of the rule. It brings the political reality
and monumental societal shifts right down to a
human level.
The film’s opening half hour focuses on the
apparent death by drowning of Liyun and Yaojun’s
son Xingxing in a northern factory town reservoir
during the mid-1980s. The narrative then quickly
propels us forward to some time later in a southern
province, where the same couple have a teenager
they also call Xingxing, seemingly adopted. A time
jump further back reveals Haiyan (Ai Liya), their
factory section boss and a close friend, forced Liyun
to comply with state policy and get an abortion
after she was pregnant with a second child, the
repercussions of which only come to the horrible
fore after the Xingxing tragedy.
Although he has never directed a film of similar
length to this one, nor anything that covers such
an expansive timeframe, the effects of So Long, My
Son’s fragmented style bring to mind the best films
by Canadian filmmaker Atom Egoyan. Works such
as Exotica or The Sweet Hereafter run on non-linear
narratives that begin with the gradual parcelling
out of one peculiar, often disorientating detail at
a time, until all the temporal fragments gradually
fall into place. Those films train you how to follow
their story, and the same goes for So Long, My Son.
Wang ’s ordering of his story’s chronology follows
a similar logic to The Sweet Hereafter, about the
sombre legacy of a school bus crash.
A scene taking place in a different decade to the
one that directly preceded it isn’t a gimmick used
just to make a viewer lose their bearings. Rather, it
serves as the connecting tissue between adjoining
scenes that serve to create a fluid emotional arc
where moments communicate with one another
across time. As a restult of this, the film juxtaposes
wildly different events to examine recurring
dilemmas and traumas. It presents similar states
of devastation or euphoria, and shows how the
full consequences of one swift decision can be
completely clear if you’d only been able to see a tiny
bit further into your future.
Yet the film is not purely a work of doom and
gloom, as reconciliations are slowly achieved, and
there’s even a suggestion that time can heal even
the deepest wounds to some extent. It says that
love between people can remain even if top-down
pressures generate unspeakable sorrow. On that
note, any minor gripes with one or two subplots fade
away long before the deeply moving conclusion.
JOSH SLATER-WILLIAMS
Directed by
WANG XIAOSHUAI
Starring
AI LIYA
DU JIANG
GUO-ZHANG ZHAO-YAN
Released
6 DECEMBER
ANTICIPATION.
At three hours, it’s so long (my
son). But two acting prizes at the
Berlinale bodes well.
ENJOYMENT.
The plotting rhythms take some
getting used to but this is an
incredibly immersive experience.
IN RETROSPECT.
A lingering, heart-breaking epic
of great subtlety, specificity and
ultimately universal power.
So Long, My Son
T