In Public (film)
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''In Public'' () is a short documentary film directed by
Jia Zhangke Jia Zhangke ( zh, c=贾樟柯, p=Jiǎ Zhāngkē, born 24 May 1970) .He is a Chinese-language film and television director, screenwriter, producer, actor, and writer. He is the dean of the Shanxi Film Academy of Shanxi Media College and the dea ...
, a Chinese cinema " Sixth Generation" movement filmmaker. ''In Public'' was shot on digital video for the 2001
Jeonju International Film Festival Jeonju International Film Festival (JIFF, Korean: 전주국제영화제, Hanja: 全州國際映畵祭) is an Asian film festival. It was launched in 2000 as a non-competitive film festival with partial competition. It introduces independent a ...
. In many ways, the film was a test-run for the feature length fiction film ''
Unknown Pleasures ''Unknown Pleasures'' is the debut studio album by English rock band Joy Division, released on 15 June 1979 by Factory Records. The album was recorded and mixed over three successive weekends at Stockport's Strawberry Studios in April 1979, wi ...
''. Both films are shot digitally (a medium Jia would return to in '' Still Life'' (2006) and ''
24 City ''24 City'' ( zh, s=二十四城记) is a 2008 film directed and co-written by Chinese film-maker Jia Zhangke. The film follows three generations of characters in Chengdu (in the 1950s, the 1970s and the present) as a state-owned factory gives ...
'' (2008)), both are set in the city of Datong, and both share the same shooting locations. As usual, Jia's regular collaborator
Yu Lik-wai Yu Lik-wai (; born 12 August 1966), sometimes credited as Nelson Yu, is a Hong Kong cinematographer, film director, and occasional film producer. Born in Hong Kong, Yu Lik-wai was educated at Belgium's INSAS ( Institut National Superieur des Arts ...
served as the film's director of photography. The film also screened at the 2002
Marseille Festival of Documentary Film Marseille International Film Festival (in French the Festival international de cinéma de Marseille or FIDMarseille) is a documentary film festival held yearly since 1989 in Marseille, France. The festival awards grand prizes in international and ...
, where it won the Grand Prix.


Background

''In Public'' was made and submitted by Jia as part of a program at the 2001
Jeonju International Film Festival Jeonju International Film Festival (JIFF, Korean: 전주국제영화제, Hanja: 全州國際映畵祭) is an Asian film festival. It was launched in 2000 as a non-competitive film festival with partial competition. It introduces independent a ...
, where three directors were asked to produce a short film in digital video. The other two directors who produced entries that year were Taiwanese filmmaker
Tsai Ming-liang Tsai Ming-liang (; born 27 October 1957) is a Malaysian-Taiwanese filmmaker. Tsai has written and directed 11 feature films, many short films, and television films. He is one of the most celebrated "Second New Wave" film directors of Taiwanese ...
and British director John Akomfrah. Setting up his camera in a train station in Datong, Jia made a film consisting of thirty shots over forty five days. Lacking in any formal plot, the film instead captures seemingly mundane moments, customers asking for the train schedule, shots inside public buses, etc. The result, according to Chinese film scholar Berenice Reynaud, is a film that captures the "ennui, backwardness, and dreary atmosphere of a small town, and the impatience, hidden desires and private concerns of its inhabitants." For Jia, the film was a chance to focus on the public spaces in a modern provincial city of China: the train stations, discos, and karaokes of Datong.


Relationship to ''Unknown Pleasures''

While filming ''In Public'', Jia became interested in not only the desolate-looking buildings that had originally attracted him to the city, but to the people who inhabited them. Moreover, Jia came to realize that filming digitally allowed him unprecedented flexibility and movement, inspiring him to begin production of ''Unknown Pleasures''. Jia has said, "At first it was the bleak and lonely buildings that attracted me. When I saw the streets filled with lonely, directionless people, I became interested in them." One critic, however, sees the film as more of a positive depiction of humanity than seen in ''Unknown Pleasures'', noting that the film's final scene of people dancing in a dilapidated community center (the same center that opens the later film) elicits a sense of "people persevering despite the impoverishment of their existence." ''Unknown Pleasures'', in contrast, is "incendiary bleakness and outrage." Stylistically, ''In Public'' fits with the Jia oeuvre, situated between ''Platform'' and ''Unknown Pleasures'', with the long takes of the former and the same desolate locations of the latter.


References


External links

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''In Public''
at the Chinese Movie Database {{DEFAULTSORT:In Public (Film) Chinese short films Chinese documentary films 2000s short documentary films 2001 films 2000s Mandarin-language films Films directed by Jia Zhangke 2001 documentary films Films set in Shanxi 2000s Chinese films