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sorry, the link does not work out, here is the content of review

本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛Unknown Pleaures: The World of Jia Zhangke
- Select a film - In Public Pickpocket Platform The World Unknown Pleasures Xiao Shan Going Home


Cinematheque Ontario marks its fifteenth anniversary by launching an ongoing series, “Film Now,” which, as its name suggests, features the most important emerging directors in contemporary cinema – artists who, after only three or four works, are clearly masters. It might be reckless to claim that they represent film’s future – predictions of sustained greatness often founder on unforeseen factors – but the directors in “Film Now” are, according to critical and curatorial consensus, the most significant to have appeared in the last decade. Our first choice, the young Chinese director Jia Zhangke, signals a remarkable transformation, in which Europe and the States have been displaced by Asia as the indisputable centre of international film culture. Along with our previous retrospectives of the films of Hou Hsiao-hsien, Wong Kar-wai, and Tsai Ming-liang, upcoming “Film Now” installations, including those dedicated to Thailand’s Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Japan’s Hirokazu Kore-eda, and South Korea’s Hong Sang-soo, will illustrate this exciting development.

– James Quandt

UNKNOWN PLEASURES: THE WORLD OF JIA ZHANGKE

“The world’s greatest filmmaker under 40.” – Dennis Lim, The Village Voice

“The most gifted and stylistically and thematically contemporary Chinese filmmaker to have emerged in years.” – Jonathan Rosenbaum, Chicago Reader

“One of the most exciting filmmakers of our time.” – Kent Jones, Film Comment

Not since Hou Hsiao-hsien has an Asian auteur produced a body of work of such poetic density and formal authority as Jia Zhangke – and, given the recent emergence of numerous important directors in Thailand, South Korea, and China, that is saying a great deal. Though the thirty-four-year-old Chinese director has made only four feature films and a clutch of short video works, Jia already stands with Hou, Wong, and Tsai in the elite of Asian cinema, his each new work anticipated with the fervour once accorded the giants of European cinema.

Like Hou, a bard of his country whose tone tends to the bereft, Jia has charted China’s transformation from communism to a market economy (from Mao to Thatcher, dialectical to brute materialism, as it were) in a quartet of superbly exploratory films, from the low budget, underground XIAO WU (1997) through his most recent work THE WORLD (2004), the first Jia film to be approved by Chinese officials. (Ironically, the latter is as subversive and arguably more damning a critique of the new China as Jia’s three previous features, all banned and available only on pirated DVDs in his home country, the source of a bitter in-joke in UNKNOWN PLEASURES.)

Born in 1970 in Fenyang, a small rural town in Shanxi province, Jia has always been attuned to those “left behind” by the convulsive changes in Deng Xiaoping’s go go China. Jia’s first films, set in dusty, peasant outposts far from Beijing, portray a series of luckless provincials – a pickpocket, a young theatre troupe, two unemployed teenagers – oblivious to or uncomprehending of the invisible forces that buffet their lives. Bewildered or merely benumbed, they change with the styles of pop culture (karaoke bars and the influx of consumer products in XIAO WU, bell bottoms, perms, and breakdancing in PLATFORM, Taiwanese pop and international fashion in UNKNOWN PLEASURES), constantly revising their identities (like Qiao Qiao’s succession of wigs in PLEASURES), even as they are trapped in helpless stasis – a point made by THE WORLD, in which Jia’s characters finally make it to Beijing only to be immured in the artificial world of a theme park.

To compare Jia with Hou runs the risk of detracting from the younger director’s originality, but the similarities of their respective approaches are often striking, especially the combination of poetry and analysis, tenderness and dispassion, embodied in a visual style that emphasizes the long, observational take. Hou remembers intuitively telling his cinematographer, “Pull back! More detached!” In Hou, history inheres in the everyday, and the aim of his remote camera, which moves laterally or parks itself at a distance to observe, is, paradoxically, empathy and intimacy. Similarly, Jia’s watchful style, which suspends time and forces attention to social detail in XIAO WU, imposes tableaux and frieze-like compositions on the restless itinerants of PLATFORM, and conversely roves and floats in the weightless DV mobility of UNKNOWN PLEASURES, is employed with almost ethnographic objectivity, but achieves greater emotional effect than any heavy editing or close-up. “If I were to break up a scene which lasts for six or seven minutes into several cuts,” Jia has said, “then you lose that sense of deadlock. The deadlock that exists between humans and time, the camera and its subject.” To the impatient, Jia’s “deadlock” will translate as aloofness or aesthetic impasse, but his withholding pays off, as we shall see, in poignancy.

One could list many other similarities between Hou and Jia, including their marked sympathy for unmoored youth – though Jia’s is more autobiographical, Hou’s more distantly empathic – and concern with identity (national, individual); their elliptical narratives, complex employment of offscreen space, and acute awareness of how history impinges upon the personal; their vivid sense of landscape, use of pop music as both catharsis and commentary, neo-Brechtian emphasis on performance (Jia’s films are full of dances, songs, shows), and – most markedly – their tragic sense of life as an accrual of loss and injury, of broken or vanished ideals and irretrievable loves. Some of their films could profitably be paired to reveal affinities of theme, shooting style, or narrative approach: Hou’s THE PUPPETMASTER with Jia’s PLATFORM, GOODBYE SOUTH GOODBYE or THE BOYS OF FENGKUEI with UNKNOWN PLEASURES, MILLENNIUM MAMBO with THE WORLD.

Though Jia lists Hou’s FENGKUEI as one of his formative influences, along with Chen Kaige’s YELLOW EARTH, Bresson’s A MAN ESCAPED and De Sica’s THE BICYCLE THIEF, his debt to Hou can be overstated. Jia’s aesthetic, at least in the early films, owes more to neorealism and documentary, even reportage, than does Hou’s, and his singular, designed audioscapes, which incorporate copious amounts of stray or found sound in their inquisitive richness are distinctly different from those of Hou. Neither does Jia’s interest in history have the magisterial reach of Hou’s epics; the younger director sticks mostly to what he knows from direct observation. One cannot quite imagine in a Hou film the welter of contemporary political references in UNKNOWN PLEASURES: the bombing of a textiles plant, crackdowns on Falun Gong, China’s entry into the World Trade organization, a collision between US and Chinese military planes, the 2008 summer Olympics coming to Beijing. Likewise, though Hou is not immune to homage (to Ozu in GOOD MEN, GOOD WOMEN, for example), he would resist the blunt insouciance with which Jia invokes PULP FICTION in UNKNOWN PLEASURES.

Perhaps accounting for their popularity in Japan – both directors’ recent films have Japanese producers, including Takeshi Kitano – Jia and Hou, like Ozu and Naruse, are subtle chroniclers of societal transition whose rigorous visual and narrative styles are aesthetic accomplices to sentiment. Emotion in their films, particularly melancholy, nostalgia, and longing, is heartfelt, unstinting. Hou’s films can fell a viewer with their blinding sadness or their sudden release of hoarded sorrow – e.g. the conclusion of GOOD MEN, GOOD WOMEN. Jia’s are no less poignant. The pickpocket naked in a bathhouse and singing his soul out, or his presence crowded from the image altogether to express his humiliation in XIAO WU; the All Star Rock and Breakdance Electronic Band performing by the side of a highway near the Yangtze, literally and metaphorically sidelined by the setting, by time and history, in PLATFORM; Qiao Qiao doing a doleful dance after she breaks up with her boyfriend or Bin Bin being forced to sing his favourite song by a policeman in UNKNOWN PLEASURES; the peasant father tearfully stuffing the money he has been paid for his dead son into his coat in THE WORLD – the catalogue of such moments and images in Jia’s films, from the merely forlorn to the outright anguished, is ample. Datong, Fenyang, Beijing – all cities of sadness.

When it was rumoured that Jia’s new film, THE WORLD, was to be made in “the system” – i.e. with the approval of the Chinese Film Bureau – many claimed that the underground radical had sold out. Some erstwhile supporters contend that the film is more conventional than his previous three, either because of its comparatively lavish production values, its tonal sophistication, or its determinist narrative. Hardly. From its first plaintive, repeated cry, “Does anyone have a Band Aid?” to its ghostly final question about beginnings and endings, THE WORLD takes great aesthetic and political risks, extending in every way Jia’s formal methods and thematic preoccupations, and offers his most devastating critique yet of China’s rush to erect a shining facsimile of civilization over the broken hopes of a generation.

– James Quandt更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
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Replies, comments and Discussions:

  • 枫下拾英 / 乐韵书香 / anyone here are fans of Chinese young film director Jia Zhang-Ke? he will be in Toronto for his new movie <the world> this Friday, very nice chance to meet him in person.
    • never heard of him, interested in seeing the movie, but not in meeting him :)
    • the review about Jia and his movies
      • broken link
        • sorry, the link does not work out, here is the content of review
          本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛Unknown Pleaures: The World of Jia Zhangke
          - Select a film - In Public Pickpocket Platform The World Unknown Pleasures Xiao Shan Going Home


          Cinematheque Ontario marks its fifteenth anniversary by launching an ongoing series, “Film Now,” which, as its name suggests, features the most important emerging directors in contemporary cinema – artists who, after only three or four works, are clearly masters. It might be reckless to claim that they represent film’s future – predictions of sustained greatness often founder on unforeseen factors – but the directors in “Film Now” are, according to critical and curatorial consensus, the most significant to have appeared in the last decade. Our first choice, the young Chinese director Jia Zhangke, signals a remarkable transformation, in which Europe and the States have been displaced by Asia as the indisputable centre of international film culture. Along with our previous retrospectives of the films of Hou Hsiao-hsien, Wong Kar-wai, and Tsai Ming-liang, upcoming “Film Now” installations, including those dedicated to Thailand’s Apichatpong Weerasethakul, Japan’s Hirokazu Kore-eda, and South Korea’s Hong Sang-soo, will illustrate this exciting development.

          – James Quandt

          UNKNOWN PLEASURES: THE WORLD OF JIA ZHANGKE

          “The world’s greatest filmmaker under 40.” – Dennis Lim, The Village Voice

          “The most gifted and stylistically and thematically contemporary Chinese filmmaker to have emerged in years.” – Jonathan Rosenbaum, Chicago Reader

          “One of the most exciting filmmakers of our time.” – Kent Jones, Film Comment

          Not since Hou Hsiao-hsien has an Asian auteur produced a body of work of such poetic density and formal authority as Jia Zhangke – and, given the recent emergence of numerous important directors in Thailand, South Korea, and China, that is saying a great deal. Though the thirty-four-year-old Chinese director has made only four feature films and a clutch of short video works, Jia already stands with Hou, Wong, and Tsai in the elite of Asian cinema, his each new work anticipated with the fervour once accorded the giants of European cinema.

          Like Hou, a bard of his country whose tone tends to the bereft, Jia has charted China’s transformation from communism to a market economy (from Mao to Thatcher, dialectical to brute materialism, as it were) in a quartet of superbly exploratory films, from the low budget, underground XIAO WU (1997) through his most recent work THE WORLD (2004), the first Jia film to be approved by Chinese officials. (Ironically, the latter is as subversive and arguably more damning a critique of the new China as Jia’s three previous features, all banned and available only on pirated DVDs in his home country, the source of a bitter in-joke in UNKNOWN PLEASURES.)

          Born in 1970 in Fenyang, a small rural town in Shanxi province, Jia has always been attuned to those “left behind” by the convulsive changes in Deng Xiaoping’s go go China. Jia’s first films, set in dusty, peasant outposts far from Beijing, portray a series of luckless provincials – a pickpocket, a young theatre troupe, two unemployed teenagers – oblivious to or uncomprehending of the invisible forces that buffet their lives. Bewildered or merely benumbed, they change with the styles of pop culture (karaoke bars and the influx of consumer products in XIAO WU, bell bottoms, perms, and breakdancing in PLATFORM, Taiwanese pop and international fashion in UNKNOWN PLEASURES), constantly revising their identities (like Qiao Qiao’s succession of wigs in PLEASURES), even as they are trapped in helpless stasis – a point made by THE WORLD, in which Jia’s characters finally make it to Beijing only to be immured in the artificial world of a theme park.

          To compare Jia with Hou runs the risk of detracting from the younger director’s originality, but the similarities of their respective approaches are often striking, especially the combination of poetry and analysis, tenderness and dispassion, embodied in a visual style that emphasizes the long, observational take. Hou remembers intuitively telling his cinematographer, “Pull back! More detached!” In Hou, history inheres in the everyday, and the aim of his remote camera, which moves laterally or parks itself at a distance to observe, is, paradoxically, empathy and intimacy. Similarly, Jia’s watchful style, which suspends time and forces attention to social detail in XIAO WU, imposes tableaux and frieze-like compositions on the restless itinerants of PLATFORM, and conversely roves and floats in the weightless DV mobility of UNKNOWN PLEASURES, is employed with almost ethnographic objectivity, but achieves greater emotional effect than any heavy editing or close-up. “If I were to break up a scene which lasts for six or seven minutes into several cuts,” Jia has said, “then you lose that sense of deadlock. The deadlock that exists between humans and time, the camera and its subject.” To the impatient, Jia’s “deadlock” will translate as aloofness or aesthetic impasse, but his withholding pays off, as we shall see, in poignancy.

          One could list many other similarities between Hou and Jia, including their marked sympathy for unmoored youth – though Jia’s is more autobiographical, Hou’s more distantly empathic – and concern with identity (national, individual); their elliptical narratives, complex employment of offscreen space, and acute awareness of how history impinges upon the personal; their vivid sense of landscape, use of pop music as both catharsis and commentary, neo-Brechtian emphasis on performance (Jia’s films are full of dances, songs, shows), and – most markedly – their tragic sense of life as an accrual of loss and injury, of broken or vanished ideals and irretrievable loves. Some of their films could profitably be paired to reveal affinities of theme, shooting style, or narrative approach: Hou’s THE PUPPETMASTER with Jia’s PLATFORM, GOODBYE SOUTH GOODBYE or THE BOYS OF FENGKUEI with UNKNOWN PLEASURES, MILLENNIUM MAMBO with THE WORLD.

          Though Jia lists Hou’s FENGKUEI as one of his formative influences, along with Chen Kaige’s YELLOW EARTH, Bresson’s A MAN ESCAPED and De Sica’s THE BICYCLE THIEF, his debt to Hou can be overstated. Jia’s aesthetic, at least in the early films, owes more to neorealism and documentary, even reportage, than does Hou’s, and his singular, designed audioscapes, which incorporate copious amounts of stray or found sound in their inquisitive richness are distinctly different from those of Hou. Neither does Jia’s interest in history have the magisterial reach of Hou’s epics; the younger director sticks mostly to what he knows from direct observation. One cannot quite imagine in a Hou film the welter of contemporary political references in UNKNOWN PLEASURES: the bombing of a textiles plant, crackdowns on Falun Gong, China’s entry into the World Trade organization, a collision between US and Chinese military planes, the 2008 summer Olympics coming to Beijing. Likewise, though Hou is not immune to homage (to Ozu in GOOD MEN, GOOD WOMEN, for example), he would resist the blunt insouciance with which Jia invokes PULP FICTION in UNKNOWN PLEASURES.

          Perhaps accounting for their popularity in Japan – both directors’ recent films have Japanese producers, including Takeshi Kitano – Jia and Hou, like Ozu and Naruse, are subtle chroniclers of societal transition whose rigorous visual and narrative styles are aesthetic accomplices to sentiment. Emotion in their films, particularly melancholy, nostalgia, and longing, is heartfelt, unstinting. Hou’s films can fell a viewer with their blinding sadness or their sudden release of hoarded sorrow – e.g. the conclusion of GOOD MEN, GOOD WOMEN. Jia’s are no less poignant. The pickpocket naked in a bathhouse and singing his soul out, or his presence crowded from the image altogether to express his humiliation in XIAO WU; the All Star Rock and Breakdance Electronic Band performing by the side of a highway near the Yangtze, literally and metaphorically sidelined by the setting, by time and history, in PLATFORM; Qiao Qiao doing a doleful dance after she breaks up with her boyfriend or Bin Bin being forced to sing his favourite song by a policeman in UNKNOWN PLEASURES; the peasant father tearfully stuffing the money he has been paid for his dead son into his coat in THE WORLD – the catalogue of such moments and images in Jia’s films, from the merely forlorn to the outright anguished, is ample. Datong, Fenyang, Beijing – all cities of sadness.

          When it was rumoured that Jia’s new film, THE WORLD, was to be made in “the system” – i.e. with the approval of the Chinese Film Bureau – many claimed that the underground radical had sold out. Some erstwhile supporters contend that the film is more conventional than his previous three, either because of its comparatively lavish production values, its tonal sophistication, or its determinist narrative. Hardly. From its first plaintive, repeated cry, “Does anyone have a Band Aid?” to its ghostly final question about beginnings and endings, THE WORLD takes great aesthetic and political risks, extending in every way Jia’s formal methods and thematic preoccupations, and offers his most devastating critique yet of China’s rush to erect a shining facsimile of civilization over the broken hopes of a generation.

          – James Quandt更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
          • thanks!
      • New York Times' Review of the Movie, seems to be an interesting movie
        本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛FILM FESTIVAL REVIEW; Caged in Disney in Beijing, Yearning for a Better Life

        By MANOHLA DARGIS
        Published: October 11, 2004, Monday

        Globalization and its discontents form the molten core of ''The World,'' the new film from the prodigiously talented Chinese director Jia Zhang-ke. Set in a sprawling Disney-like entertainment park in a Beijing suburb, the film centers on a young woman dancer, Tao (Zhao Tao), whose entire universe seems to begin and end at the complex. Along with her boyfriend, a security guard named Taisheng (Chen Tai-sheng), Tao yearns for a better life but can barely articulate much less envision what a life beyond this peculiarly conceived simulacrum might look like.
        As he did with his last feature, ''Unknown Pleasures,'' Mr. Jia has fashioned a quietly despairing vision of contemporary China with an almost ethnographic attention to detail and a somewhat cavalier attitude to narrative momentum. The film opens with Tao tramping through the backstage corridors and warrenlike dressing rooms where she and the other young performers spend so much of their time. Dressed like a Las Vegas version of a Hindu princess and insistently, rather hilariously bellowing for a bandage, she makes for a gaudy and curiously poignant spectacle. By the time she finally finds her Band-Aid, the credits have rolled and the dressing rooms have emptied out of the other performers, leaving her to tend to the first of many such wounds.

        Loosely constructed, ''The World,'' which plays today and tomorrow at the New York Film Festival, drifts along pleasantly for much of its two-and-a-half-hour running time. Mr. Jia has a terrific eye and an almost sculptural sense of film space (especially in close quarters), and he brings texture and density to even the most nondescript rooms. And while he's too in love with the film's overarching metaphor, he nonetheless gracefully incorporates the theme park into the everyday lives of its workers. In one scene, we pass by a miniature Leaning Tower of Pisa with the nonchalance of an Italian citizen; in another scene, the pyramids of Egypt, complete with drifts of sand and a masticating camel, make a suitably dramatic backdrop to a fight between friends.

        In time, something of a story fades emerges, built on incident, mood and the amorphous desires of the film's characters. Tao befriends a Russian woman whose melancholic smile, crumpled family photograph and horribly bruised shoulders speak volumes about her plight. The scenes of the two women trying to communicate despite their language differences at times veer dangerously close to melodramatic excess, in particular when the Russian starts to drunkenly serenade Tao, but Mr. Jia manages, for the most part, to keep sentimentality at bay. In the end, what makes Tao herself a figure of greats pathos isn't that she understands the other woman's tragedy; it's that because, locked inside this false world, Tao does not and, suggests Mr. Jia, cannot see her.

        In a sense, however, this miniaturized world creates a prison for the filmmaker, as well. Mr. Jia isn't just enamored with his metaphor; he's mesmerized by it. As he wanders around the amusement park, repeatedly cutting away to the phony Eiffel Tower jutting into the China sky, the pyramids and even the Manhattan skyline, he increasingly comes across less like a filmmaker who knows what he's after and more like a besotted tourist. Even when he occasionally takes us outside the park, for a glimpse of the whirring Beijing street life, with its teaming humanity and a shocking glimpse of Chairman Mao beatifically smiling over the city, you get the sense that Mr. Jia is as eager to return to his manufactured world as much as any of the film's other caged birds.

        The World
        Written (in Mandarin, with English subtitles) and directed by Jia Zhangke; director of photography, Yu Likwai; edited by Kong Jinglei; music by Lim Giong; art director, Wu Lizhong; produced by Fumiko Osaka and Peng Dong Sang. Running time: 133 minutes. This film is not rated. Shown tonight at 6 p.m. and Tuesday at 9 p.m. at the Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Center, 165 West 65th Street, as part of the 42nd New York Film Festival.

        WITH: Zhao Tao (Tao), Chen Taisheng (Taisheng), Jing Jue (Xiaowei), Jiang Zhongwei (Niu), Wang Yiqun (Qun), Wang Hongwei (Sanlai), Liang Jingtong (Tao's ex-boyfriend), Xiang Wan (Youyou) and Liu Juan (Yanquing).更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
    • I have the collection of all his movies. Zhao Tao stars in every movies of his, including this one. His movies are dark but very reflective.
      • wow, here comes a real fan of his movie, btw, is Zhao Tao also in Xiao Wu? let me check it out, no, she is not the star in Xiao Wu
        • U right. Except for Xiao Wu.
      • they must be all pirated DVDs :)
    • 谁知道获奥斯卡最佳外语片提名的《Downfall》什么时候在加拿大上映?? 好想看这部片!!!!!
      • 已在2004电影节上映过, 等DVD出来吧.
        • 你看了吗? how is it?
          • 没看.
    • 来自Rolia:因为贾樟柯的缘分(原创)
      本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛他是很早给我写私人信息的ROLIA网友。

      在那之前,就算我把所有的网上恩怨,统统都一笑了之,把所有网上风云,通通都付之一笑,人和事,都当成不思量不留心的过眼云烟,我还是已经大致上,注意到有他这么一个ID的存在了,谁让他如此“格色”呢?

      看他忙一件事情,从网下吆喝到网上,路人皆知,又因为合作意见不一,非常冲动非常纯情少男一般地跟人吵架,从网上吵到网下,天下皆闻。

      所做所为,所言所语,看得出是个激情依旧的大男孩,如火,似焰。

      已经过了玩火的年纪了,这样的激情魅力,只可远观。

      何况,还有我一向来以不变应万变的万灵法宝:君子之交淡如水。

      他能是例外?

      有时候我想,这也是网络的致命缺陷,或者,是网络的致命诱惑吧。

      偶尔会看到他或者他的狐朋狗友在网上贴出来的照片,也会有些烟雨朦朦,涌上心头:如果,在真实生活中,遇到这样的激情男人,没有各霸一方知心知人不知面的网络这个“防护”,激情的火焰会燃烧起来么?烧起来了,会有怎样的熊熊烈焰,潮起潮落之后,又会是什么样子的结局?

      现实生活,是没有“如果”的。

      现实世界,只有非常非常纯粹而纯洁的私人信息。

      彼此的喜欢,欣赏,爱戴。

      从文字,到风格。

      从内涵,到观点。

      还有,彼此的惺惺惜惺惺。比如,对贾樟柯电影的共同爱好。

      有一天,他突然写给我说,要离开多伦多了,要不要见上一面?

      你在多伦多的日子我们都没动心思见面,就把如今这网上的美好,长留心中?我习以为常的祝福过去:一路平安,今后保重。

      他说,我有贾樟柯的《小武》VCD,我知道你一直想看,想送给你,做个纪念,怎么给你?

      读到这则他在ROLIA发给我的私人信息,那一刻天轰地裂,那一刻天荒地老。

      (为了保护他的个人隐私,我不能对他广而告之的所做所为,曝光太多。)更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
      • before your this post, I don't even know 蛋泥 is such a bad guy!!!
        • 蛋尼有post照片吗?蛋尼有离开加拿大吗?倒是黑暗离开过。
          • 蛋尼有post照片吗?yes, 蛋尼有离开加拿大吗?yes, 倒是黑暗离开过。he is one of the suspects as well
            • 那他们俩谁会“看他忙一件事情,从网下吆喝到网上,路人皆知,又因为合作意见不一,非常冲动非常纯情少男一般地跟人吵架,从网上吵到网下,天下皆闻。”
              • 蛋泥!
                • #2181667,也是蛋尼!dnc,桌子会暴料,你不知道吗?!惨了你。
                • 不是我。流水偷桌子,怎么让我拔撅儿啊。流水给我出来,别提起X子就不认帐呀。
                  • hahahaha
                  • 你们哥儿几个,不是ROLIA上的三剑客么,怎么这么自毁情义无价的形象啊,你?
        • after her this post, I strongly believe table is so bad a girl that she disclose 流水 first,then someone else here.
          • (#2181667) @_@ 你可真是有够三八的,你
      • 笑得太多,呵呵
      • 如果不是他临走时,送给我的贾樟柯《小武》VCD,此刻正放在我电脑桌的CD驾上,他这个人的存在,和有他的故事,是不是真的有如我那些被版主删掉的帖子,烟消云散?
      • 什么叫“格色”? 是 "这个色" 吗?
        • this ZT answer for your laugh
          • Oh, it is a great theory of common sense with clean language.
    • 最喜欢的是《小山回家》...没看过《逍遥游》很想看看,谁有碟吗?
      • 如果你在多伦多,建议你去看大银幕的原版电影,《逍遥游》的放映时间是 8:30 PM Saturday, March 26, 2005,在AGO附设的艺术影院。
        • where is it? could u give the addr.?
          • Jackman Hall Art Gallery of Ontario 317 Dundas Street West Toronto, ON M5T 1G4 (southwest corner of Dundas Street West and McCaul Street, McCaul Street entrance, two blocks west of St. Patrick subway station)
      • do you know any place in toronto can buy his movies?
    • Today's free newspaper: EYE