Umbrella (film)

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Umbrella
Traditional Chinese
Simplified Chinese
Hanyu PinyinSǎn
Directed byDu Haibin
Produced byBen Tsiang
Du Haibin
Hsu Hsiao-ming
CinematographyLiu Aiguo
Edited byDu Haibin
Fang Lei
Mary Stephen
Zang Jiali
Music byXu Chunsong
Distributed byCnex Ltd.
Release date
  • September 2, 2007 (2007-09-02) (Venice)
Running time
93 minutes
CountryChina
LanguageMandarin

Umbrella or Sǎn is a Chinese documentary film directed by Du Haibin and released in 2007. The film documents the experiences of modern rural China, particularly five social groups: students, soldiers, tradespeople, and peasants. Du's stated goal with the film was to highlight the growing disparity between China's prosperous cities and its stagnating countryside.[1]

Umbrella is divided into five parts, one for each social group documented. The first takes place in Zhongshan, in Guangdong province at an industrial warehouse where poorly paid workers spend hours putting together umbrellas for sale. In another part of China, in Yiwu, Zhejiang province, a successful farmer has become an entrepreneur, running an umbrella manufacturing business.

The film then shifts to Shanghai, as it follows students and recent graduates who struggle to find employment in a hyper-competitive market. The students know that failure to find a job will mean a return to their rural roots.

The fourth part follows a People's Liberation Army garrison and new recruits. The recruits all come from farms in the countryside, looking for another life.

The last part of the film takes place in Luoyang, Henan province. It documents an elderly peasant in a village that consists mostly of the old and infirm, as subsequent generations seek their fortunes elsewhere.

Reception

References

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