Lou Ye’s controversial SUMMER PALACE is the story of young lovers whose relationship plays out against the movement for political reform, its violent suppression and the years of disillusionment that follow. After his film world premiered in the Cannes Film Festival’s competition, Lou Ye was banned from filmmaking for five years by Chinese authorities.
Beautiful country girl Yu Hong (Hao Lei) leaves her village, family and lover to study at Peking University, where she discovers a world of sexual freedom. When she falls in love with fellow student Zhou Wei (Guo Xiaodong), their relationship, driven by passions neither one can understand nor control, becomes one of dangerous games - betrayals, recriminations, provocations - as all around them, students begin to demonstrate, demanding freedom and democracy.
As the protests collapse, Yu and Zhou lose each other amidst the social chaos and panicked crowds. Zhou is sent to a summer military camp, and moves to Berlin upon his release, fleeing his country and memories of Yu. In Germany, social unrest is mounting too; as the Berlin wall crashes down, Zhou, weary and still haunted by Yu, returns to China and finds her living in a small town. With their uncertain future stretched out before them, they are two changed souls in a changed world. Will they survive together or alone?
In his ravishingly shot SUMMER PALACE, acclaimed “Six th Generation” writer-director director Lou Ye (“Suzhou River,” “Purple Butterfly”) reveals a portrait of a place and generation - China and liberated Chinese youth - as never seen before in the West. Lyrical and brutal, elusive and explicit, elegiac and erotic, SUMMER PALACE depicts a passionate love story and the struggle for personal liberty jeopardized by history and fate.
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“Sex and politics are on full boil in ‘Summer Palace,’ an engrossing … epic about the generation of Chinese students who came of age brutally in 1989…Beautifully blends the political with the personal much as Flaubert does in ‘Sentimental Education.’”
Manhola Dargis, The New York Times
“Exceptional”
Mark Jenkins, Washington City Paper
“One of the great female characters of recent years. I am stunned at the performance of Lei, who creates a vivid, knowable, yet mysterious human being. Unforgettable.”
Steven Hunter, Washington Post
“A mesmerizing, wonderfully acted love story.”
Kirk Honeycut, The Hollywood Reporter
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