Yu Zhang – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st Mon, 28 Jul 2025 19:04:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/cropped-Vintage-Movie-Camera-Icon-32x32.png Yu Zhang – Cinema of the World https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st 32 32 Ho Yim – Taiyang you er AKA The Sun Has Ears (1995) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2025/07/ho-yim-taiyang-you-er-aka-the-sun-has-ears-1995/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2025/07/ho-yim-taiyang-you-er-aka-the-sun-has-ears-1995/#respond Wed, 09 Jul 2025 03:06:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=249799 Quote: The story of a northern Chinese peasant wife in the 1920s whose personal life is played out against a background of sweeping political change. Taiyang.you.er.1996.576p.PAL.DD.2.0.x264-rttr.mkvGeneralContainer: MatroskaRuntime: 1 h 43 minSize: 2.27 GiBVideoCodec: x264Resolution: 706x434 ~> 752x434Aspect ratio: 1.735Frame rate: 25.000 fpsBit rate: 2 938 kb/sBPP: 0.384Audio#1: Chinese 2.0ch AC-3 @ 192 kb/s https://nitro.download/view/38CCBF27E503107/Taiyang.you.er.1996.576p.PAL.DD.2.0.x264-rttr.mkv Language(s):CantoneseSubtitles:English …

The post Ho Yim – Taiyang you er AKA The Sun Has Ears (1995) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>

Quote:
The story of a northern Chinese peasant wife in the 1920s whose personal life is played out against a background of sweeping political change.



Taiyang.you.er.1996.576p.PAL.DD.2.0.x264-rttr.mkv

General
Container: Matroska
Runtime: 1 h 43 min
Size: 2.27 GiB
Video
Codec: x264
Resolution: 706x434 ~> 752x434
Aspect ratio: 1.735
Frame rate: 25.000 fps
Bit rate: 2 938 kb/s
BPP: 0.384
Audio
#1: Chinese 2.0ch AC-3 @ 192 kb/s

https://nitro.download/view/38CCBF27E503107/Taiyang.you.er.1996.576p.PAL.DD.2.0.x264-rttr.mkv

Language(s):Cantonese
Subtitles:English Hardcoded

The post Ho Yim – Taiyang you er AKA The Sun Has Ears (1995) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>
https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2025/07/ho-yim-taiyang-you-er-aka-the-sun-has-ears-1995/feed/ 0
Yanjin Yang – Xiao jie AKA Narrow Street AKA The Alley (1981) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2022/07/yanjin-yang-xiao-jie-aka-narrow-street-aka-the-alley-1981/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2022/07/yanjin-yang-xiao-jie-aka-narrow-street-aka-the-alley-1981/#comments Wed, 27 Jul 2022 01:16:00 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=174988 SynopsisNarrow Street is the story of two youths: Xia, an easygoing, good-humored mechanic, and Yu, who is rather shy and delicate. They first meet in the late sixties, during the chaotic days of the Cultural Revolution in China. The chaos and desperation around them strengthens their friendship, but one day Xia discovers that his friend …

The post Yanjin Yang – Xiao jie AKA Narrow Street AKA The Alley (1981) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>

Synopsis
Narrow Street is the story of two youths: Xia, an easygoing, good-humored mechanic, and Yu, who is rather shy and delicate. They first meet in the late sixties, during the chaotic days of the Cultural Revolution in China. The chaos and desperation around them strengthens their friendship, but one day Xia discovers that his friend actually a girl. Yu then tells him her story – the sufferings of her family, why she had to disguise herself. When Xia tries to find a wig for her, he is badly beaten, and by the time he leaves the hospital, Yu has disappeared. The film is a powerful condemnation of the political radicalism of the Cultural Revolution and shows how ordinary people were victimized during a decade of turmoil.

2.17GB | 1h 40mn | 682×410 | mkv

https://nitro.download/view/AF0EB0842A4E796/Narrow.Street.AKA.Xiao.Jie.1981.DVDrip.x264.mkv

Language:Chinese
Subtitles:English,Chinese

The post Yanjin Yang – Xiao jie AKA Narrow Street AKA The Alley (1981) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>
https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2022/07/yanjin-yang-xiao-jie-aka-narrow-street-aka-the-alley-1981/feed/ 3
Yigong Wu & Yonggang Wu – Ba Shan Ye Yu aka Evening Rain (1980) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2019/05/yigong-wu-yonggang-wu-ba-shan-ye-yu-aka-evening-rain-1980/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2019/05/yigong-wu-yonggang-wu-ba-shan-ye-yu-aka-evening-rain-1980/#comments Fri, 17 May 2019 09:10:23 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=99793 This film had a deep influence upon China in the 1980s, as it was beginning to come to terms with the Cultural Revolution. Quote:Evening Rain, a feature film co-directed by Wu Yonggang and Wu Yigong, is about the years of the Cultural Revolution. Qiu Shi, a well-known poet, is wronged during that political movement. He …

The post Yigong Wu & Yonggang Wu – Ba Shan Ye Yu aka Evening Rain (1980) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>

This film had a deep influence upon China in the 1980s, as it was beginning to come to terms with the Cultural Revolution.

Quote:
Evening Rain, a feature film co-directed by Wu Yonggang and Wu Yigong, is about the years of the Cultural Revolution. Qiu Shi, a well-known poet, is wronged during that political movement. He is aboard a passenger ship bound for Chongqing from Wuhan under the guard of a young man and a young woman. In the third-class cabin, there is a village girl who has sold herself to repay her family debt, a woman teacher who speaks out from a sense of justice, an old actor who has had a full taste of suffering, an old woman who is on her way to commemorate her son killed in the violent factional struggle, and a righteous young worker. Each of them is laden with worries and sufferings. When they come to know Qiu Shi, they all show sympathy for him. Liu Wenying, the woman escort, is a simple, naive young woman. At the beginning, she thinks the persecuted poet is an out-and-out enemy. But what she hears and learns from the other passengers during the days and nights of the voyage makes her feel low, amazed, and awakened. She makes up her mind to save Qiu Shi. What makes the film unique is that although it was based on the persecution and sufferings of the people during the Cultural Revolution, it stresses the fine inner world of the ordinary people, their mutual concern and love, and their unshakable faith in the future. There was no evildoer on the screen, but the viewers could sense the sinful shadow in their own minds: the root cause of people’s sufferings. It seemed that this film aroused the people more and made them think more carefully about history than those films that directly showed the disasters caused by the Cultural Revolution. Evening Rain won the Outstanding Film Prize issued by the Ministry of Culture in 1980 and the Best Feature Film Prize at the First Golden Rooster Awards in 1981. ~

0.98GB | 01:19:39 | 608×448 | avi

https://nitro.download/view/31AD217BBD1FC80/Bashan.yeyu.1980.Wu.Yonggang.avi
https://nitro.download/view/9CE08CEB8B393FC/Bashan.yeyu.1980.Wu.Yonggang.srt

Language:Mandarin
Subtitles:English srt

The post Yigong Wu & Yonggang Wu – Ba Shan Ye Yu aka Evening Rain (1980) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>
https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2019/05/yigong-wu-yonggang-wu-ba-shan-ye-yu-aka-evening-rain-1980/feed/ 2
Hu Bo – Da xiang xi di er zuo AKA An Elephant Sitting Still (2018) https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2018/12/hu-bo-da-xiang-xi-di-er-zuo-aka-an-elephant-sitting-still-2018/ https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2018/12/hu-bo-da-xiang-xi-di-er-zuo-aka-an-elephant-sitting-still-2018/#respond Wed, 12 Dec 2018 11:27:41 +0000 https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/?p=84254 In the northern Chinese city of Manzhouli, they say there is an elephant that simply sits, unaffected by the pain and tribulations of the world at large. Manzhouli becomes an obsession for the protagonists of this film – a longed-for escape from the downward spiral in which they find themselves inextricably bound together. Among them …

The post Hu Bo – Da xiang xi di er zuo AKA An Elephant Sitting Still (2018) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>

In the northern Chinese city of Manzhouli, they say there is an elephant that simply sits, unaffected by the pain and tribulations of the world at large. Manzhouli becomes an obsession for the protagonists of this film – a longed-for escape from the downward spiral in which they find themselves inextricably bound together. Among them is schoolboy, Bu, on the run after pushing Shuai down the stairs, who was bullying him previously. Bu’s classmate Ling has run away from her mother and fallen for the charms of her teacher. Shuai’s older brother Cheng feels responsible for the suicide of a friend. And finally there’s Mr. Wang, a sprightly pensioner whose son wants to offload him onto a home. In virtuoso visual compositions, the film tells the story of one single suspenseful day from dawn to dusk, when the train to Manzhouli is set to depart.

The following texts are taken from the film’s press kit.

DIRECTOR’S BIOGRAPHY
Hu Bo (Writer and Director) Born in 1988 in China, Hu Bo graduated from Beijing Film Academy in 2014 with a B.F.A. degree in directing. His short film Distant Father (2014) won Best Director at Golden Koala Chinese Film Festival, and Night Runner (2014) was selected by Taipei Golden Horse Film Academy. His debut feature An Elephant Sitting Still, which was then still in progress, was selected by the FIRST International Film Festival Financing Forum in 2016. In the following year, Hu Bo participated in FIRST Training Camp under the supervision of Béla Tarr, where he completed the short film Man in the Well. He has also written two novels Huge Crack and Bullfrog, both published in 2017.
An Elephant Sitting Still was his first feature-length film. This is a four-hour portrait of a society of egoists. Tragically, it will also be the final chapter in his legacy. On October 12, 2017, the artist took his own life at age 29.

DIRECTOR’S STATEMENT
“He thought that in the beauty of the world were hid a secret. He thought that the world’s heart beat at some terrible cost and that the world’s pain and its beauty moved in a relationship of diverging equity and that in this headlong deficit the blood of multitudes might ultimately be exacted for the vision of a single flower.” This quote from Cormac McCarthy is also the subject of this film. In our age, it’s increasingly hard for us to have faith even in the tiniest of things, and the frustration from which becomes the hallmark of today’s society. The film builds up personal myths in between daily routines. In the end, everyone loses what he or she values the most.

INTERVIEW WITH HU BO
(conducted during the press release of Huge Crack on December 28th, 2016)

You graduated from Beijing Film Academy with a degree in directing. Does your film study experience influence your creativity in any way? What roles do writing and filmmaking play in your life?
Hu: I keep film and literature very much apart from each other. I can only manage one of the two during a certain period of time, because they are completely different art forms.
In fact, I wish I could separate them even further, but I don’t have enough brain for that. Making a film is very difficult. It has a lot of tedious requirements, and usually cannot be done. In that case, I have nothing to do but write. Writing is a very free medium, and requires no preconditions. Nowadays people like to say that films can be shot on mobile phones, but I think that is the same as saying writing can be achieved with just numbers.

Some people claim that your works deliver a lot of negative emotions such as decadence, dejection, and desperation. What do you think of these claims?
Hu: You can ask whoever made these claims to reflect on himself for just a second everyday when he wakes up, before he goes to bed, or when he fetches a cup of water at the water dispenser at work, and he will know he’s only looking at his life through rose-colored glasses. All he’s doing is posting tweets, living up to labels, or hoarding hundreds of pictures on his cell phone while waiting for a chance to flaunt them to others. I’m not disapproving these behaviors. However, the truly valuable things lie in the cracks of the world, and not pessimistically so. If he can understand this, he may just be awed by the orders of life.

What is an ideal life to you?
Hu: I’m 28 years old now. I used to desire an ideal life when I was a teenager. I don’t see it in this way anymore. There is simply no ideal life. It is only about choosing what kind of regrets you are willing to live with.

Do you intend on adapting stories from Huge Crack into films? Would you prefer writing and directing by yourself or collaborating with another director?
Hu: I separate film from literature, and I don’t plan on adapting my own novels. If someone wants to adapt Huge Crack, I hope it won’t be turned into a film about youth. Because the book is not about youth, but rather about the majority of junior college students in China. People often talk about the white-collars, the bottom class, the vested interest, the entrepreneurs, among other labeled social groups, and envelop their teenage years under a collective and polished term, youth. Such a definition is wrong. This massive group of Chinese young adults, who do nothing but slump in their dorms all day and play videogames, lead heedless lives and go on pointless dates, don’t have youth.
Their lives are rather filled with much more complicated things—as complicated as that in Camus’s The Outsider. For instance, these people do not concern themselves with materialistic matters, and the older ones in the group often like to criticize everything. But can humans live on without worrying about substance? Class distinction did not exist decades ago. However, the youngsters today are burdened with something of enormous weight on their minds the day they step into the college gates. Did the age of bike-riding have that? Hence, I hope the young people of our age will not undermine their own lives, because the emptiness that the flesh-eating savages faced in the woods, or a dying soldier faces on the battlefield, is not so different from the emptiness that they face today.

Which story in the book Huge Crack are you most satisfied with? Why?
Hu: An Elephant Sitting Still. It is the last story I wrote in September this year. After I finished it, I felt that I have achieved a stage in my creative endeavor. This story has a great significance to me. It has brought me to completely negate myself, and thus extricated me from myself to go on writing other people’s stories.

Many stories in the book Huge Crack leave people with very realistic impressions. Are any of them real life stories, or part of your own experience?
Hu: Every story has a real origin, and each of those origins follows a real emotional development with real details. You could see them as real stories, and I think they may very well happen in real life, but those that do take place in reality are more powerful than what I’ve written.

If you organize a book tour, will you “freeze” in front of your readers? Are you an inarticulate person in life? Is it because you are better at expressing yourself in writing that you are less so in communicating in person?
Hu: I don’t think many people will come, so I probably won’t “freeze.” Though I cannot be sure. I become nervous in front of a crowd, but not when I’m on a film set, since there are clear agendas during shooting. I’m clueless of what to do on occasions such as book tours and film roadshows. I don’t think I have communication problems. It is usually the film crew who “freeze” and stare at me after I finish talking to them. So they are the ones with communication problems.

11.03GB | 3h 54mn | 1280×720 | mkv

http://nitroflare.com/view/4FDAA12E231E08F/An.Elephant.Sitting.Still.2018.720p.AAC.2.0-SaL.mkv
http://nitroflare.com/view/3F266D587D19C45/An.Elephant.Sitting.Still.2018.-.Credits.720p.AAC.2.0-SaL.mkv

Language:Chinese
Subtitles:English

The post Hu Bo – Da xiang xi di er zuo AKA An Elephant Sitting Still (2018) first appeared on Cinema of the World.

]]>
https://worldscinema.torrentbay.st/2018/12/hu-bo-da-xiang-xi-di-er-zuo-aka-an-elephant-sitting-still-2018/feed/ 0