King of the Children (1988) Poster

(II) (1988)

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8/10
Chen is a filmmaker of great imagination, intelligence, courage, and influence
Nazi_Fighter_David13 November 2005
Warning: Spoilers
In "King of the Children," the tale of a young man, exiled during the Cultural Revolution to Yunnan and chosen (despite his own minimal education) to teach a class of semi-literate peasant children who are accustomed to learning by memory only, (without intelligent understanding and assimilation) becomes a quiet but heartfelt portrait of the development of individual consciousness in a land suppressed by economic, cultural and social poverty…

The teacher, of course, is finally dismissed for neglecting the official curriculum… But Chen's recognition of his country's need to revitalize itself through changes which still allow for the spiritual traditions of pre-Communist China, is gloriously manifested in the final liberating, dreamlike shots of a forest in flames, dead wood being destroyed to free an ancient and beautiful landscape…

Along with other young filmmakers, Chen is instrumental in the creation of a new, politically and artistically invigorating Chinese cinema, far removed from simplistic melodrama and martial arts escapism… While he continually runs the risk of being marginalized, or even prevented from working, by pressures of censorship and bureaucracy, he has already proved himself a filmmaker of great imagination, intelligence, courage, and influence
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9/10
King of the Children is a masterpiece
mulvi13 March 2004
For viewers who are already familiar with the Cultural Revolution, <<King of the Children>> is a subtle commentary on that era. Chen Kaige uses humour and philosophy to address the issues of the Cultural Revolution, and he creates a space for the adults who suffered during that period and the children who followed them.

Part of what makes this movie a masterpiece is the cinematography. Chen Kaige focuses on the vast landscapes of western China. The imagery reflects on personal and political aspects of Taoism through which the director has processed China's modern history.

For viewers who are not familiar with history, the movie will still have a profound effect. The themes are universal: how do we transmit our knowledge and/or our wisdom to the generation which follows us? How do we balance political problems with personal growth?

Another part of this movie's success is its humour. Chen Kaige portrays irony in the politicking of the state and the lives of the characters. Fans of <<The Dead Poets' Society>> will appreciate the hero's tactics teaching a class of children without books or paper, while the school administrators store stacks of books and papers in their offices.

I would recommend this movie to anyone who wants to better understand the Fifth Generation directors and the challenges of Chinese cinema shortly following the Cultural Revolution.
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10/10
Chen Kaige's most ambitious film
bing_ming6615 March 2001
Haizi Wang focuses on a group of "sent down youth": teenagers exiled to the countryside in the far SW province of Yunnan during the cultural revolution. The protagonist accepts a job as a teacher in an impoverished school and begins teaching his rural pupils in the traditional manner--the instructor transcribes the text of the lesson on the chalkboard, the students recite the lesson aloud, and copy the text in their notebooks. His most ambitious student takes on the task of transcribing the entire dictionary.

The subject of this film is the propagation of Chinese cultural values through traditional style of education. This theme reflects a view prevalent among Chen Kaige's generation who experienced the CR first hand: even though the Cultural Revolution set out to do away with the trappings of China's "feudal" cultural heritage, the language and rhetoric of the participants was infused with deep rooted, "traditional feudal values." Thus the CR only succeeded in replicating the same values it sought to eradicate.

The cinematography and narrative structure of the Haizi Wang underscore the director's concern with breaking from blind imitation of conventional filmmaking.

**Contrast with other films about sent down youth: Sacrificed Youth and Xie Jin's The Herdsman.
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10/10
An eulogy of humanity hidden in the social criticism
zzmale24 November 2003
In contrast to his previous works of carefully concealing the criticism of not-so-favorite part of Chinese tradition, this film took a completely different turn: although generally shaped by the social criticism, namely, targeting Cultural Revolution, there is a praise of the good part of traditional Chinese culture, such as the dedication for the next generation, the endurance, the emphasis on education.
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9/10
The best of the director
shusei23 October 2003
Sometimes it happens, but it happened to Cheng Kaige very sadly. I say about the cases when very talented young director, who could have become one of 10 greatest directors in history of cinema, loses his potential greatness by the underestimation of his best film. It happened to Sokurov's "The days of eclipse", but not so sadly. It didn't happen to Robert Bresson, because he had very strong will and faith.

Why,this vivid and human film with ambitious vision,did won nothing in Canne, without the most shameful prize for the most boring film!! Juries were fools? Or they refused to give Chinese director any honor to his artistic results(I say it not because I'm an Asian,but because I love film art)? I can't understand it at all.

"Hai zi wang" is cheerful as Jan Vigo' films, human as Kurosawa's best films, revolutional as Antonioni's best films, beautiful as Tarkovsky's best films. Yes, it has some weakness compared with them, but we can understand the reason. 1987 is the time, when all great directors of older generation had already done their best works or already died. And in China all progressive cinema hadn't shown. Studio system was dead almost everywhere in the world.

The result of this underestimation pushed the director toward Hollywood. The next film was still good, but not as "Hai zi wang". The film about two actors of traditional Chinese theater won in Canne, but is was completely different film, with Hollywood style.

The great director Cheng Kaige has lost his way...

We, spectator can still compensate for this. Just watch this human story, with philosophical depth and cinematographic novelty, and remember it as film art. And let's welcome and estimate properly when such films will appear next time.
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9/10
Best Teaching Film of All Time - Haizi Wang (King of the Children)
arthur_tafero17 February 2021
King of the Children (Haizi Wang) may have a General Audiences rating; however it is far from a general audiences film (especially Western audiences). The film is too austere, too realistic, and too poignant to be appreciated by the vast majority of Western viewers. They appreciate teaching films like Goodbye, Mr Chips (both the classic original with Robert Donat and the passable remake with Peter O'Toole), Conrack, To Sir With Love, Stand and Deliver, Dead Poet's Society, and even Mr. Holland's Opus. These are all fine films in their own right, and I may have left off one or two of the viewers' favorites, but this films annihilates them for sheer raw power.

Set in a very poor countryside village in the early 1970s, the settings of the other teacher films on the list are luxurious in comparison. The ghetto of Los Angeles is a luxury resort compared to these villages and the struggle of these Chinese peasants to merely survive every day with food and clothing. We do not see communism at all in any of these scenes; merely poverty and people pulling together to survive in a basic socialistic approach. There is no other way to survive these conditions. Chen Kaige is one of the two greatest directors in Chinese cinema (the other being Zhang Yimou). And it shows in this stunningly beautiful, and at the same time, ugly, film. The movie requires a great deal of patience to watch (I viewed it with no subtitles and had no problem understanding every scene; the mark of a great filmmaker). Few Americans will have the patience to endure the film, nor the intelligence to appreciate it, but some will. It is a trip worth taking.
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