Blind Mountain Movie Review
Blind Mountain Review
It sounds so promising: Xuemei, a naïve young woman, follows a man and a woman out
to the boonies of early 1990s China in the hopes of securing a job with the company
they run. Instead, she finds herself being sold as a bride to the vile son of local
farmers in the hopes that she'll eventually bear them a grandchild and help maintain
their farm. Seeing as the film is directed by Li Yang, the young filmmaker behind
the 2003 coal-mine thriller Blind Shaft, the movie should be a slam dunk. Yet, it's not
to be.
A much-discussed entry at last year's Cannes Film Festival, more for its bewilderingly-abrupt
ending than any controversial subject matter, Blind Mountain basically amounts to
a set of escapes and captures, all orchestrated competently by Yang. Xuemei, played
admirably by Huang Lu, rebels at the very sight of her so-called husband (Yang Youan)
as he attempts to consummate the sale. It's only later, with the husband's parents holding
Xuemei down, that he finally gets to have his way.
When simple escape fails, Xuemei's plans run a bit loose on the moral side. First,
she (debatably) falls for her husband's cousin, the only educated man in the entire
village and the teacher of all the children. Her husband's mother, a nightmarishly-adrift creation,
takes notice, helps banish the cousin, and is the first to notice Xuemei's lack of
menstruation. As she beats her stomach in an attempt to cause a miscarriage, the
mother-in-law begs her to do anything but hurt the baby; They're going to need m
ore farmers sooner or later.
Colored fully within the lines and with scant few moments of fascination, Blind Mounta
in turns out to be a frustrating piece of anonymous cinema. Whatever signature was
on Blind Shaft, and it was an indelible one, has here been buried underneath an aesthetic
dead-calm. Political allegory? Perhaps, but if that's true, it's neither a smart
one nor a clever one. The climax, involving Xuemei's father attempting to rescue
his daughter, gives the movie a moment of liveliness that escalates into the brake-screech
ending. Well, at least it's not perfunctory.
In fairness, Yang does allow for two moments of utter horror, the first being when
Xuemei tries to slit her wrists and, on arrival at the hospital, the family is asked
to pay before the doctors and nurses begin to work. The second, and far more infuriating, is
when Xuemei's father finally comes to free his daughter with two Chinese government
officials. As the town rallies around the father and his broken girl like the farmers
in Frankenstein, the government officials talk with the village official and decide
that, to keep both village and country happy, the girl should stay with her kidnappers.
Enraging and engaging as these moments are, they bring up a more direct question:
Why wasn't the whole film that angry?
Aka Mang shan.
Reviewer: Chris Cabin




