905 Movie Network Special Article The rolling high mountain tops are covered with snow, the plateau pastures are vast, fat yaks pace leisurely, the blue sky and the lake reflect each other, and the condor flies rapidly from the sky...
Whether it is the sacred ceremony before dawn or the enthusiastic Guozhuang dance, the joyful singing of people gathered in one place echoes from mountain to mountain.
The vastness of Tibet is scattered in the blue-gray morning light at dawn, and is also mixed into the distant and lonely howling of wolves in the dusk.
Whenever we talk about Tibet, there are always various things lingering in our minds.
html At 20:10 on March 27, the movie channel will premiere for you the Tibetan film "Back to Tibet", which won the China Film Golden Rooster Award for Best Small and Medium-Cost Feature Film.The movie tells the story of Lao Kong (played by Song Yang) who came to work in Tibet for the first time and his Tibetan compatriot Jiumei (played by Jinba), from estrangement to communication, from mutual misunderstanding to mutual trust, from work partners to life and death friends. story.
"Downplay all the plots and return to life itself. This is the original intention of our film creation. As a new director, I am reflecting every time I create, how can we make new breakthroughs and differences? The overall tone of "Back to Tibet", The way it was shot was different from any of my previous films,” director Lahuaga said.
Abandoning the landscape and imagination, taking life as the basis, "Back to Tibet" tells the trivial matters of life. Pilgrims kowtow all the way to Mount Kailash, which is a "wish" that does not require questioning.
Pulling a thief to swear to the temple is "evidence" that goes beyond evidence.
Grandma Quzhen’s calm attitude towards birth, old age, illness and death is a reflection of her piety and persistence in her faith.
The plague sheep incident reflects the collision and integration of thinking and culture between the two nations.
The vastness of heaven and earth and the magnificence of mountains and rivers echo with the simplicity and piety of Tibetan people. The whole film uses calm and soothing camera movements and documentary-style long shots to poetically narrate their conflicts and symbiosis in daily life. .
The trivial matters under the breath of fireworks also gradually established an indestructible friendship between Lao Kong and Jiumei.
Language, food, customs, and values, from the initial "you don't understand" to the understanding and understanding, the movie slowly tells us the depth of close friends with the slow and restrained flow of the plot. camaraderie.
In fact, the friendship between Lao Kong and Jiumei has a real prototype. The prototype of Lao Kong in the film is Kong Fansen, who "has his loyal bones buried everywhere in the green mountains, and his blood is spilled on the plateau", while Jiumei's prototype is a Tibetan named Ngawang Quni, who served as a translator for Kong Fansen when he was young. In his work and life, he developed a deep friendship with Kong Fansen that spanned nationalities.
As early as more than 20 years ago, director Chen Guoxing directed the movie "Kong Fansen".
"Deep in our hearts, we feel that there are several reasons for wanting to touch upon the subject of Tibet again: one of them is that we feel that our previous works left a lot of regrets." Therefore, more than 20 years later, director Chen Guoxing once again based on the same character prototype, and collaborated with a young Tibetan director Lahuaga co-wrote "Back to Tibet".
There are no great and glorious heroic images in the movie. Lao Kong went from not knowing how to eat dried meat to becoming proficient in cutting it with a knife; from being helpless when faced with Tibetans' reluctance to bury sick sheep, to gradually understanding and integrating into the land of Tibet.
's down-to-earth and ordinary deeds, let us review through the lens, his love for this land and the people on this land is so simple, so simple, and so deep.
"After many years, I returned to Tibet, to my other home. The land here, the people here, and close friends always haunt me in my dreams, calling me back. And here. The blue sky, white clouds, snow-capped mountains and holy lakes may be my destination."
For Lao Kong, Tibet was another hometown that he cared about deeply in his heart.
"The body is like an empty shell, no matter when you die, you will have no regrets. Wisdom is like gold, but you will regret it when it passes away." This poem that lingers throughout the film is also a footnote to Kong Fansen, a cadre who aided Tibet, who dedicated his life.
The image of him galloping by the lake, shining like gold in the sun, has been integrated into this sacred place.
His story is spread in this sacred land, inspiring those who come after to move on.
Although he has left, his spirit will always remain on this plateau and will shine forever.
html At 20:10 on March 27, the movie channel will premiere the movie "Back to Tibet" for you to feel the strong Tibetan customs, as well as the love for the motherland and the deep friendship for the people of the cadres who aided Tibet.