Local people, local scenes
Watching movies can make you a better person. Or at
least, it can make you a worldier, more modern, less
fearful person. This is the argument made by
producer-director Ann Hu's Shadow Magic, a charming
if sometimes clumsy reimagining of the days before
multiplexes, Blockbusters, and Godzilla-burgers made
movies mundane, rather than special events.
Specifically, the film fictionalizes the introduction
of motion pictures to China as East-meets-West
romance. It's 1902 in Peking, and Liu Jinglun (Yu Xia)
is a young photographer working at the Feng Tai Photo
Shop. Fascinated as much by the technology as the art,
Liu is regularly distracted by new inventions (the
phonograph, for instance) and admonished by his
employer, Master Ren (Liu Peiqi), to keep focused on
business. As the film opens, Liu is taking a portrait
photo of Peking's greatest opera star, Lord Tan (Li
Yusheng), and takes a fancy to Tan's daughter Ling
(Xing Yufei). Suddenly, the session is interrupted by
cocky Englishman Raymond Wallace (Jared Harris), who's
come to town to promote his newfangled moving picture
show, "Shadow Magic."
The Chinese are affronted by these "Western tricks"
and promptly remove the interloper from their studio,
but Liu is intrigued. On visiting Raymond's theater,
he's enchanted by the shorts he sees (most by the
Lumiere brothers), until Raymond recovers his sense of
commercial priorities and kicks him out. At this
point, and rather quickly, Liu figures out -- on his
own -- how the machine works, suggesting that he's
inventive and dedicated enough to have come up with
the technology himself, and so raising the possibility
that the rest of the movie might have gone on without
Raymond, but then, the meeting of East and West would
be rendered unnecessary.
This meeting becomes a partnership: Liu solicits
skeptical customers off the street and adds
phonographic accompaniment while Raymond cranks the
projector. The viewers react with stereotypical wonder
at the images (they run away from the train coming
into the station, just as viewers famously did in
France), laugh at the silly Westerners, and then
inevitably identify with such silliness. Then they
light upon the brilliant idea to shoot their own
footage, what Liu calls "local people, local scenes."
Turns out that customers not only want to see other
cultures, but they also want to imagine themselves
preserved for eternity and to mug for the camera. It's
a small world after all.
As inspired as it obviously is by movies as noble
concept and practice, Shadow Magic can't seem to
avoid such simplistic sentiments about the Chinese, or
granting the more sophisticated, progressive attitude
to the Westerner. To this end, Raymond
brings/represents advances not only in technology, but
also in romance. He and Liu start making money and
inadvertently siphoning off Lord Tan's audience, but
this is potential disaster Liu frets because he's
actually trying to become financially worthy of
marriage to Ling.
This pot turn reimagines cultural differences as
generational differences: Liu's interests make him
pioneering, a disappointment to his aging father (who
wants him to marry a wealthy, and of course
corny-looking, widow) and a source of frustration
Master Ren, who long ago married for money and is now
unhappy with the arrangement, feeling put-upon his
bossy wife. But if Liu has the right idea, he only
able to articulate it because he's encouraged by
Raymond ("Why can't you live your own life?"), who
believes in marrying for love, despite the detail that
his own much-adored wife left him back in England
because he was too involved in his work.
Here the film offers still another angle on cultural
differences: Raymond is teaching Liu how to be
masculine (lessons include a public fistfight and stop
short of the physical romance that, on one level,
seems perfect for these character). True, Raymond
drinks too much, he's pushy and insensitive to social
nuances, and so may not the best role model, and true,
Liu is plainly inclined to new ideas even without
having met Raymond. Except for the forward-looking
Liu, the Chinese men are either too rigid or too soft.
Liu has both the vision, sensitivity, and courage to
be a real man, that is, someone with whom a Western
audience can identify.