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  • Four Girls
  • Possible Days - Trilogy on Tenderness
  • Rita Moreira: chronicles, memories and videotape
  • Me Niego Rotundamente
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  • What we did in the Shadows
  • Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma
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  • Umjolo: There Is No Cure
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  • Manhood

Together

Country: China, Language: Chinese, 83 mins

Original Title

Zai Yi Qi
  • Director: Zhao Liang
  • Writer: Zhao Liang
  • Producer: Changwei Gu

CGiii Comment

An interesting - if somewhat strange - experiment.

A film casts people with HIV as extras...then asks the others what they think?!?

The format is a tediously repetitive series of talking blurred-out heads...basically saying the same thing: the shame they have brought upon their families.

The end credits...with the 'stars' of the film waxing lyrical upon HIV will make you cringe. It's definitely an us-and-them situation.

If this film changed attitudes in Chine - great. Otherwise, it's a relentless and depressing marathon with sentimental music to make sure you get the required gut reaction.


No trailer...

 

The(ir) Blurb...

Zhao Liang’s film portrays Aids sufferers of both genders; they are all people with very different biographies. As if it wasn’t bad enough being infected by HIV, their suffering is compounded by the fact that in the People’s Republic of China the disease is hushed up and people living with Aids are ostracised. In China, the public at large knows very little about the disease and most people associate the virus with promiscuity. This fear of discrimination forces most patients to hide the fact that they are positive. The Aids sufferers in Zhao Liang’s film were willing to share their experiences with him. The filmmaker was able to make contact with them via internet support groups; he also visited children with Aids at a ‘red ribbon’ school; but above all, he talked to Aids sufferers during the making of Gu Changwei’s film. It is their presence which lends Changwei’s film its particular authenticity.

Cast & Characters

Aaron Kwok as Himself;
Ziyi Zhang as Herself