Do Look Back
Adult children heading "home" has long been a popular
theme in U.S. media. Just think back on a few recent
melodramas featuring characters who return to their
roots and/or rediscover themselves, once they head
back to see parents, siblings, or traumatic childhood
memories: Hope Floats, The Gilmore Girls, One True Thing, Judging Amy, The Myth of Fingerprints, Ed, Providence, Any Day Now . . . . The list goes on and on, as does the familiar storyline: if you can reconnect with some past
grievance or difficulty, you can make yourself whole
again. It's all part of a grand plan and testament to
the human spirit. As moving as such a story can be
(and it's at least as often corny as it is effective),
the emotional displays tend to be large and the
consequences contrived.
Knowing this story a little too well makes it all the
more refreshing to find a version that actually feels
new. Such is the small miracle offered by Zhang
Yimou's The Road Home, a film that is breathtakingly unspectacular, simultaneously simple and nuanced. The
script, adapted by Bao Shi from his own novel, tells a
tale as basic as can be: an engineer from the city,
Luo Yusheng (Sun Honglei), comes home to the tiny
village where he grew up, in order to help his mother,
Zhao Di (Zhao Yuelin), arrange for his father's
burial. He imagines, while driving the long, stark
road home, that the whole business will be painful but
also predetermined: a funeral is a funeral, after all.
On his arrival, however, Yusheng finds Di parked in
the snowy yard, at the schoolhouse where his father
taught for some forty years. Chilled to the bone and
bereft, she agrees to return to her humble home with
Yusheng, but insists that he arrange for a traditional
procession and burial. These ideas include a group of
men carrying her husband's coffin from the city
hospital to the village, no small feat, especially
because, as the mayor informs Yusheng, all the young
men, like Yusheng himself, have moved to the city,
leaving only old men, women, and children in the
village. As he contemplates just how to get this job
done -- indeed, whether he should get it done --
Yusheng recalls the story of his parents' courtship,
and learns some things about himself in the process.
When the extended flashback begins, the film's washed
out black and white turns to brilliant, lush color.
This choice surely enhances the past's romance and
sensual excitement, but the effect is actually more
complex than that, suggesting the many colors that
often attributed to memories, especially in the wake
of loss. In this lengthy part of the film, Yusheng's
mother is reintroduced as a lovely young girl (played
by Zhang Ziyi, the dazzling breakout star of
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, here in her film
debut, which was completed before the Ang Lee film),
living with her blind grandmother in rural poverty. As
soon as she hears the voice of the new schoolteacher,
Luo Changyu (Zheng Hao), Di falls completely in love,
and the rest of the film follows their proper,
agonizingly respectful efforts to get together.
Di takes the first step, undertaking to prepare a
delicious meal each day for Changyu's lunch, while he
and the other men of the village build the new
schoolhouse. The trouble is, all the village girls are
bringing special dishes to the communal table, for all
the village men at work building the new schoolhouse,
and it's hard for Di to see who takes her dish, given
that the girls must remain at a distance while the men
eat. These scenes, repeated several times, are so
lovely and carefully composed that it's difficult to
describe them: as the men approach the table, you see
only their torsos and arms, their dark clothes
blending together so they look like a herd. At the
same time, the sounds of their shuffling footsteps,
mixed with dishes rattling, overcome any individual
voices. Poor Di strains to see who picks up her dish,
but cannot.
Their eventual meeting, when Changyu comes to her home
(according to the village code, he visits each home
for a meal), allows them to reveal, without speaking,
their mutual admiration, and from this moment, Di is
determined to prove herself worthy of the city
gentleman's affections. Just as their romance might
begin, though, Changyu is called back to the city
because of ominous-sounding but ineffable "political
trouble." While other villagers gossip and then begin
to forget their beloved schoolteacher, Di is firm in
her resolve to await her husband-to-be's return.
Zhang's films are always pulsing with rich details of
color and sound -- think of the dyed fabrics flapping
in Ju Dou (1989), the fabulous costumes and
carefully prepared foods of Raise the Red Lantern
(1991), or the delicate but persistent clink-clink of
mah-jongg tiles in Shanghai Triad (1995) -- all of
the above made with the director's former partner and
muse, Gong Li. Always attuned to the textures and
sensual experiences of daily life, even when set
against the relatively epic backdrop of To Live
(1994), Zhang recently returned to a simpler style in
Not One Less (1998), using non-professionals as
performers and scaling down his backdrop for the story
of a schoolteacher in a tale more mundane than
earth-shaking.
The Road Home is similarly scaled back, but also
suffused with a nostalgia that's unusual for Zhang,
best known for his critiques of Chinese traditions,
and rigid gender and class structures. Here Di's
passionate, naive devotion to Changyu is unquestioned,
a function of her vibrant youth and optimism, her
utter lack of experience, self-consciousness, or
cynicism. While her yearning and beauty recall
conventional romantic heroines (and indeed, the aged
Di's home has on its walls posters for Cameron's
Titanic, the most overblown romantic movie in recent
memory -- she knows her own framework), Di's tenacity
is something else. And though the film is replete with
images of her incredible face -- smiling, breathless,
dissolving into vast golden fields and sun-dappled
backroads -- it is the character's own absolute faith
in herself, her determination to endure despite all
political or social edicts, that grants the film
unusual, and unusually moving, weight.