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Friday, December 23rd, 2011

SNOW FLOWER AND THE SECRET FAN

Evidently amongst all the other things that the
Chinese can claim to have invented/created we can also add BFF as in Best
Friends Forever.  Back in the 19th
Century a woman having a ‘laotong’ was an embedded social custom that bound two
friends. known as ‘sisters’, by a written contract and according to the account
in this movie the bond and the (platonic) love was so much deeper, more
profound and longer lasting than any marriage.
In this highly sentimental story Snow Flower and Lily
both from totally different backgrounds meet as young children and as ‘laotong’ kept their relationship going even when marriage separated them and the only
contact they could manage was by smuggling out a secret fan on which they would
send messages back and forth.  They
survive a tyrannical mother-in-law, typhoid, an abusive husband, a Rebellion,
losing a child, a bust-up, and even when Snow Flower dies prematurely, the bond
is still in tact.
Evidently the novel that this is based on upon
finished there, but director Wayne Wang has mixed this with a parallel
contemporary story between Sophia and Nina two young successful women living
and working in Shanghai the most modern of China’s cities. Sophia is in a coma after being knocked off
her motorbike, and as the friends have been estranged lately a guilt-ridden
Nina sitting by her bedside discovers a
manuscript that Sophie has been writing of the story of Snow Flower and
Lily, and this is the cue in the movie for reminiscing and to start comparing
the two sets of friends different
stories.
Gianna Jun and Li Bingbing the two actors who play both sets of friends do as
good a job as the (slightly stilted) script allowed, and I actually failed to recognize
the fact that Sophie’s Australian boyfriend was Hugh Jackman.
Wayne Wang’s resume includes the highly successful ‘The Joy Luck Club’, but this
is not in the same league as that at all. It is all very emotional, and a
soundtrack of lushly arranged music heightens the saccharine-like cutesy drama.  It is simply chinese chick-lit.

P.S. My favourite line is uttered by a young Snow Flower just before Lily is to get married and she is asked ‘what about the bed business?’ and she tells her friend that she really didnt know and then added ‘but it can’t be as hard as cleaning or embroidery’! Exactly.

★★★★★

Posted by queerguru  at  00:00


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