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Frozen (1997 film)

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(Redirected from The Great Game (1997 film))

Frozen
Fox Lorber DVD cover
Traditional Chinese極度寒冷
Simplified Chinese极度寒冷
Literal meaningextremely cold
Hanyu Pinyinjídù hánlěng
Directed byWang Xiaoshuai
Written byPang Ming
Wang Xiaoshuai
StarringJia Hongsheng
Ma Xiaoqing
CinematographyYang Shu
Edited byQing Qing
Distributed byInternational Film Circuit, Inc. (U.S.)
Release date
  • 23 October 1997 (1997-10-23) (Netherlands)
Running time
95 minutes
CountryChina
LanguageMandarin

Frozen (Chinese: 极度寒冷) is a 1997 Chinese film directed by Wang Xiaoshuai. The film was originally shot in 1994, but was banned by Chinese authorities and had to be smuggled out of the country.[1] Moreover, Wang was operating under a blacklisting from the Chinese Film Bureau that was imposed after his previous film, The Days, was screened internationally without government approval.[2] As such, Wang was forced to use the pseudonym "Wu Ming" (literally "Anonymous") while making this film.

The film, supposedly based on a true story, follows a young performance artist, Qi Lei, who attempts to create a masterpiece centred on the theme of death. After two "acts" where he simulates death, he decides that his final act will be a true suicide through hypothermia.

Frozen was originally titled The Great Game (simplified Chinese: 大游戏; traditional Chinese: 大游戲; pinyin: Dà yóuxi). This was meant to reflect the attitude of both the film and the artist portrayed within it to treat death and suicide as a game or a manipulation.[3]

Canadian scholar Erik Bordeleau has interpreted Frozen as an allegory of the aftermath of the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests in China. Qi Lei’s “experience of a radical loss of social subjectivity, staged in performative terms, powerfully echoes also that of the Tiananmen survivors, those whose lives did not come to an end, as did the world to which they belonged.”[4]

Casting

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Like Wang's first film, The Days, Frozen was cast primarily with friends of Wang Xiaoshuai. Unlike in his earlier film, the two leads of Frozen were professional actors who would become major figures in the sixth generation movement.[5] Actor Jia Hongsheng was selected to play Qi Lei, a performance artist who decides to make his own death his final work. Jia would go on to star in other sixth generation films, notably with director Lou Ye in Weekend Lover (1994) and Suzhou River (2000). Wang selected Jia in part because he was unconventional looking and in Wang's words, Jia "does not look like an actor."[5] But because Jia was Wang's friend, he did not demand payment, thus allowing the film to operate on a smaller budget.[5]

The other lead, Shao Yun, Qi Lei's girlfriend, was played by actress Ma Xiaoqing. Her casting was done in part to create parity with Jia. Wang wanted both leads to be professional actors.[5]

Production

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The film proved to be difficult to produce, much like its predecessor. However, the problems that plagued Frozen were far different from the obstacles of The Days. By far, the greatest issue during filming was the content of the film. Several key scenes required actor Jia Hongsheng to recreate performance art, such as soap-eating, and in the film's climax, self-freezing. Both scenes were difficult to capture; however, the scene in which Jia lays in ice for several minutes was the most dangerous to shoot. Indeed, Wang had to have Jia sent to the hospital immediately after shooting to check for permanent damage.[3]

DVD release

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Frozen was released on DVD by Fox Lorber on 22 February 2000 in the United States.[6] The Fox Lorber edition was basic, but included English subtitles and some extra features, including production notes and cast and crew filmographies.[6]

Awards and nominations

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Frozen was nominated at the International Film Festival Rotterdam for the Tiger Award,[7] and won the FIPRESCI Award for Special Mention.[8]

Notes

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  1. ^ Perhaps as a result of this long gestation time between production and release, various sources treat the film as anything from a 1994 to a 1997 film.
  2. ^ Berry, Michael (2005). "Wang Xiaoshuai: Banned in China" in Speaking in Images: Interviews With Contemporary Chinese Filmmakers, p. 168. ISBN 0-231-13330-8. Google Book Search. Retrieved 2008-10-05.
  3. ^ a b Berry, p. 170.
  4. ^ Erik Bordeleau, “Surviving to Oneself after Tiananmen: Wang Xiaoshuai’ s Frozen (1996)”, Concentric: Literary and Cultural Studies 40(2014): 105–124 (122).
  5. ^ a b c d Berry, p. 169.
  6. ^ a b "Frozen - About the DVD". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. Retrieved 6 October 2008.[dead link]
  7. ^ "Jidu hanleng TG-1997 – Frozen". International Film Festival Rotterdam. Retrieved 23 July 2014.
  8. ^ "FIPRESCI Award". International Film Festival Rotterdam. Retrieved 23 July 2014.
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