Stolen Life | |
---|---|
Simplified Chinese | 生死劫 |
Hanyu Pinyin | Shēngsǐ jié |
Directed by | Li Shaohong |
Written by | Liao Yimei |
Based on | Life and Death Plunder by An Dun |
Produced by | Gao Xiaoping Li Shaohong Li Xiaowan Tan Xiangjiang |
Starring |
Zhou Xun Wu Jun |
Cinematography | Gao Hu Zeng Nianping |
Edited by | Yan Wu |
Music by | Qu Bo |
Production company | Arc Light Films |
Distributed by | Global Film Initiative |
Release date |
|
Running time | 90 minutes |
Country | China |
Language | Mandarin |
Stolen Life ( Chinese: 生死劫; pinyin: Shēngsǐ jié), also known as Life and Death Plunder, is a 2005 Chinese drama film directed by Li Shaohong , and starring Zhou Xun and Wu Jun. It was released on April 23, 2005. The only thing that Li Shaohong's shattering that film has in common with Baober in Love is that both star Zhou Xun. [1] The film had won the Best Narrative Feature at the 2005 Tribeca Film Festival, it is an official selection of the prestigious, award-winning Global Lens Collection, presented by the Global Film Initiative.
In Li Shaohong's acclaimed coming-of-age drama, a teenage girl is taken to live with her aunt and grandmother in Beijing. Yan'ni (played by acclaimed Chinese actress Zhou Xun) is withdrawn and reclusive, believing that she has been abandoned by her parents and has no control over her fate. The fact that her extended family doesn't have much hope for her future only compounds her depression. Surprising everyone in her hostile household, Yan'ni is accepted to college. But as she prepares to embark on her new life of higher education, an encounter with a delivery boy triggers a series of unexpected events that will change her life forever.
Year | Award | Category | Recipients | Result | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2005 | Tribeca Film Festival | Best Narrative Feature | Stolen Life | Won | |
International Film Festival of Kerala | Golden Crow Pheasant for Best Film | Won | [5] |
Janice Page of the Boston Globe wrote that "This one hits home in places, but overall it begs for a lighter touch." [6]