IMDb > Huozhe (1994)
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Overview

User Rating:
8.0/10   5,610 votes
MOVIEmeter: ?
Up 7% in popularity this week. See why on IMDbPro.
Director:
Yimou Zhang
Writers:
Wei Lu (screenplay)
Hua Yu (novel)
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Contact:
View company contact information for Huozhe on IMDbPro.
Release Date:
December 1994 (USA) more
Genre:
Drama more
Plot:
Fugui and Jiazhen endure tumultuous events in China as their personal fortunes move from wealthy landownership to peasantry... more | full synopsis
Awards:
Nominated for Golden Globe. Another 4 wins & 2 nominations more
User Comments:
An All-Time Top Ten Film more (73 total)

Cast

  (Credited cast)
You Ge ... Xu Fugui
Li Gong ... Xu Jiazhen
Ben Niu ... Town Chief
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
Xiao Cong
Deng Fei ... Xu Youqing
Tao Guo ... Chunsheng
Zongluo Huang ... Fu Gui's dad
Wu Jiang ... Wan Erxi
Tianchi Liu ... Xu Fengxia, as an adult
Zhang Lu
Dahong Ni ... Long'er
Yan Su
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Additional Details

Also Known As:
Lifetimes
Living
To Live
Woot jeuk (Hong Kong: Cantonese title)
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Runtime:
125 min
Country:
China | Hong Kong
Language:
Mandarin
Color:
Color
Sound Mix:
Dolby

Fun Stuff

Trivia:
This film is banned in China. However, there are a number of pirate copies you can buy on the street. more
Quotes:
Xu Fugui: What did you name our son?
Xu Jiazhen: "Don't Gamble".
more
Movie Connections:
Referenced in The Safety in Rubber (2007) more

FAQ

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21 out of 21 people found the following comment useful.
An All-Time Top Ten Film, 15 June 2002
Author: intuitive7 from yti54

This is Zhang Yimou's and Gong Li's crowning triumph -- a top candidate for the greatest Chinese film of all time. Splendidly photographed and composed, consumately acted and faithfully scored, "To Live" is a three or four hour film novel lovingly packed into two hours and fifteen minutes. For a long time, Ingmar Bergman's "Fanny and Alexander" stood by itself as the greatest family epic in my moviegoing experience. "The Best Years of Our Lives" ran a distant second. But since 1995 "To Live" has moved into a very close second.

Most Chinese who lived through Mao's Revolution say this film tells it like it was at the simple townsperson level. Though it can serve as an overview of Chinese history 1944 to 1970 or so, unlike Lean's "Gandhi" or "Lawrence of Arabia", this is not a hero's biopic. Instead we see a foolish, once rich but now fallen heir and his wife blown about by the winds of fortune for three decades and challenged as parents trying to raise two children under increasingly harsh and punitive communist tyranny. What you sense in this film, that I've never seen before in any Chinese film, is how the ethical and moral principles that have prevailed in Chinese culture for 2500 years - a mix of transcendence and pragmatism, humility and grit, cosmic harmonic balance and social duty - allows an ordinary couple to accept unbearable tragedy and keep going. It also shows what this survival strategy costs them in their Communist context. The screenplay is full of cosmic irony. It makes us aware, without shouting, that this is just one family among millions. As Yimou's transitional screen message says: "...leaving no family unaffected". It is to that extent, a tribute film.

Maybe ten hours of Kieslowski's "Decalogue" might accomplish the same broad survey of of human happenstance and emotion. Maybe Kurosawa in three or four hours. But never in two plus hours have I seen the scope Zhang Yimou achieves here. "To Live" also contains as wise a moral lesson as any film I've seen, and it's a gentle one despite the surrounding violence. I couldn't paraphrase the lesson for you. I wouldn't try. Just watch. It will reach you non-verbally in about 90 minutes. Just know, this isn't Shakespeare, Hollywood or soap opera. It's something else.

Gong Li's work is as powerful as anything Streep or Sarandon have ever done in the west - which is all the more inspiring since the camera doesn't lavish star-level attention on her. As her husband, Ge You turns in an emotionally riveting, charming, sometimes funny and devastatingly honest performance. The direction is sure handed, the shooting unfailingly gorgeous. Zhang Yimou's cinematic canvass has never been so big or his palette so colorful and controlled. Full of spectacle, great sweeps of time and onrushing tides of humanity, "To Live" is still, in the end, a sweet and poignant epic with an intimate, observant heart. Great story telling. Do not miss! Try to view a letterbox version on a big screen.

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Message Boards

Discuss this movie with other users on IMDb message board for Huozhe (1994)
Recent Posts (updated daily)User
Piece of Sh*T do not watch overrated big time awok-544-216957
Your reviews make me wonder if i saw the same film.. Trickyrich
Why isn't this movie in the TOP 250 with a score of 8.2? xpdavidcai
More interesting in view of Chinese censorship than in itself blubb06
What is the meaning behind the title? Lefantome16
Can someone translate the prof's sign? belljar666
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Related Links

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