Kino Lorber: Jia Zhangke's Mountains May Depart Detailed

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Kino Lorber: Jia Zhangke's Mountains May Depart Detailed

Posted April 22, 2016 10:03 PM by Webmaster

Kino Lorber has detailed its upcoming Blu-ray release of acclaimed director Jia Zhangke's latest film, Mountains May Depart (2015), starring Tao Zhao, Sylvia Chang, and Jingdong Liang. The release will be available for purchase on July 12.

Synopsis: Mainland master Jia Zhangke (A Touch of Sin) scales new heights with Mountains May Depart. At once an intimate drama and a decades-spanning epic that leaps from the recent past to the present to the speculative near-future, Jia's new film is an intensely moving study of how China's economic boom — and the culture of materialism it has spawned — has affected the bonds of family, tradition, and love.

Mountains May Depart opens in 1999 to the strains of the Pet Shop Boys' "Go West," a song whose promise of blue skies captures the dreams of affluence that seized so many Chinese youth at the turn of the century. And it's to the West that small-town dance instructor Shen Tao (played by Jia's muse Zhao Tao) looks when she spurns the shy, introverted laborer Liangzi (Liang Jindong) to marry the slick entrepreneur Zhang (Zhang Yi). The couple soon welcomes a son, whom Zhang names Dollar — though if he could have seen only a few years into the future, he would surely have christened him Renminbi. The chasm between the family's origins and their new life of Western-style wealth grows ever wider as the film leaps ahead to 2014 and finally to 2025, when Dollar is living in Australia and struggling to relearn the mother tongue he has forgotten with the help of an attractive, older college professor (played by the great Sylvia Chang), who embodies the culture, life, and love he has never truly known.

Shooting each of the film's three time periods in a different aspect ratio — with the square Academy frame gradually expanding to widescreen — Jia creates a prescient chronicle of his country's path to the future. Lyrical, moving, and dazzlingly ambitious, Mountains May Depart is one of the year's most important films.

Special Features and Technical Specs:
  • New York Film Festival: A Conversation with Jia Zhangke (73 min., courtesy of Film Society of Lincoln Center)
  • Original Trailer
  • Booklet with Essay by Aliza Ma
  • English subtitles
  • English captions