A film by Jia Zhangke
Set against the spectacular landscape of the Three Gorges region, this humane and moving film tells two contemplative and compassionate stories of a man and a woman searching for lost partners in Fengjie, an ancient town on the Yangtze River which is being demolished and will soon vanish for ever in the flooding caused by the controversial Three Gorges hydroelectric dam project.
In the separate yet marginally connected stories, the events in the lives of these two very different people mirror each other but with a contrasting emphasis and outcome. At the same time as offering a revelatory, thought-provoking portrait of people adrift in a world they no longer recognise, Sanxia Haoren also reveals their energy, resilience and ability to reach new understandings.
Sanming Han is a coal-miner from Fengyang in Shanxi province who is looking for his ex-wife, Missy Ma, who left him taking with her their daughter whom he has not seen for 16 years. Sanming has only an address given to him many years ago, and until his arrival in the town, had been completely unaware of the demolition and flooding taking place in the area. With the help of her brother he eventually traces Missy who works on a boat which is down-river in Yichang. Their daughter, who is the reason for Sanming's journey, is now working in Dongguan, much farther south, but in their meeting both Sanming and Missy discover they have renewed feelings for each other.
Shen Hong, a nurse from Taiyuan in Shanxi, has come to look for Guo Bin, her estranged property entrepreneur husband whom she has not heard from in two years. She enlists the help of one of his old friends, archaeologist Wang Dongming, in order to find him. Discovering he is now very successful in the business of asset stripping former state-owned properties, she suspects he is also having an affair with Ding-Ya Ling, his female associate. But when they finally meet she walks away, and when he follows her she reveals that she is in love with someone else and wants a divorce.
The natural beauty of the Three Gorges and the Yangtze River is contrasted with the manual demolition of the buildings in a town that will soon be lost for ever, and the human stories set against this background are fleeting, fragile and ethereal. The slow, balanced and contemplative motion of events suggests the movement of water, bringing fluidity, transformation and renewal. The film's focus is on the destruction of time and place and our collective loneliness in the modern world, and yet it is also a testament to the depth and capacity of the human spirit to overcome and adapt to loss and change in our lives.
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