Part of the 2011 season: Back to the Future
The Bird People in China
Chugoku no Chojin
Director Takashi Miike
Cast Masahiro Motoki, Renji Ishibashi, Mako, Michiko Kase, Li Li Wang,Yuichi Minato, Tomohiko Okuda, Manzo Shinra
1998/35mm/118min/Colour/English Subtitles
Workaholic Tokyo salaryman Wada (Masashiro Motoki) ventures into deepest, darkest China to investigate a massive deposit of high-quality jade. Tailing him is Ujiie (Renji Ishibashi), a snarling yakuza hell-bent on getting Wada’s company to repay its debts. Led by their unflappable guide, Shun (Mako), the two go through rural villages and striking landscapes, quickly leaving behind all signs of the 20th century.
As the trail grows narrower and more remote, and as they brave gales, bugs and floods, the long simmering tension between Wada and Ujiie bursts into full-scale contempt. One night, after Shun gets blind drunk, he hits his head and loses his memory. Now completely lost, the trio stumbles upon a hill tribe, whose children are adorned with wings made from bamboo and paper. Their teacher, a blue-eyed woman named Yan (Li Li Wang) tells them that she is teaching them to fly.
Wada quickly becomes obsessed with this curious local. After she tells him that she has a book on human-powered flight and that her grandfather was a downed British airman, he almost believes that she can teach her students to soar. Soon Wada feels purged from the evils of city life while Ujiie decides to dedicate his life to protecting the village. (Extracted from text by Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide).
The Bird People in China marks a change of pace for the legendary Takashi Miike, proving his great versatility and poetic talent as a filmmaker.