Jinpa (2018) Poster

(2018)

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8/10
Karma, Luck & Parallel Universes
Blue-Grotto7 November 2018
Strange things happen to a jovial truck driver named Jinpa on a desolate road in the high plains of Tibet. After accidently running over a sheep, Jinpa picks up a hitchhiker who is bent on revenge for the murder of his father. The man does not look like the killing type to Jinpa, so he decides to follow the man to see how things turn out. Karma, luck and parallel universes combine along the way to guide Jinpa, along with the sheep he hit, to the next stages of life.

The soft natural light, gentle pace and exotic locations of the film are alluring and soothing to experience. The simple appearance of the film and straightforward performances by the actors, obscure a more complex and sophisticated narrative. It is a fascinating glimpse of a remote corner of the world with vibrant, happy and colorfully dressed people with intriguing and vastly different customs than are own. Tea/gambling/alcohol houses are centers of town life, for instance, and people are free to carry on intimate relationships with whomever they please (such things are not the focus of the film, just aspects of it). Seen at the 2018 Toronto International Film Festival.
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8/10
JINPA strongly signposts that Tseden has paid his dues and sufficiently acquired an auteur's own facility and vision, a rosy future is set in store
lasttimeisaw4 September 2019
Already his sixth feature, Pema Tseden is the lead figure of the quiet surge of Tibetan cinema since the noughties, JINPA is an allegorical tale set in the few-trodden Kekexili plateau in China's Qinghai province, an immense, desolate, desert no-man's land whose denizens are few and far between, and it is where, the truck driver Jinpa (played by actor Jinpa, unkempt, macho and wearing a pair of dark sunglass presumably as an in-joke to the film's name producer Wang Kai-War) run over a sheep materializing out of nowhere, which gives the film its original Chinese title "I ran over a sheep", also the name of Tseden's eponymous novel which the film is partly based on.

Opening with a Kham Tibetan "tit-for-tat" credo of revenge, JINPA fuses the brevity of its narrative with Tseden's astounding flourishes of visualizing a barren land in its pristine rawness (a majestic long take eyeing the truck streak diagonally across its 4:3 academic ratio frame in its full stretch)....

continue reading my review on my blog: cinema omnivore, thanks
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6/10
Nice Nothingness
westsideschl10 November 2020
Lots of film time spent silently watching a lorry truck driver traverse the flat desolate Northeastern Tibetan plateau; three miles high (15,000 feet). Driver sings to an Italian operatic cassette tape, and pees. Nothing but barren flatness for dozens of miles yet somehow he doesn't see and runs over a lone sheep - huh? Then, middle of nowhere, picks up a person walking along the highway. This person is going to a town to kill the man who killed his dad ten years earlier. Some reviewers mention parallel Universes, but I see no justification for it. Karma is a possibility as killing a sheep is bad. Ending not clear as to whether someone was killed, but, if so, by whom (the driver or the revengeful walker). Or, the killing is just a dream. Or, karma's circle of life is at play we see the driver as the killer enacting the next level. More clarity would have been nice. Note: Adding to the karma possibility we see the same background scene for both men of what looks like the game, Sho. Lots of stray dogs in scenes adds authenticity.
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6/10
Quiet, dreamlike
Morten_512 September 2018
Tibetan writer-director Pema Tseden's fifth feature film, "Jinpa" (2018), tells the story of a lorry driver on the windswept, deserted, frozen Tibetan plains, as he meets a mysterious stranger set to avenge his father's death. Quiet, dreamlike.
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9/10
A Meditative Spiritual Road Movie Into The Inner Self
ObsessiveCinemaDisorder23 August 2020
My curiosity was immediately ignited when I learned there was a Tibetan revenge film produced by Wong Kar Wai. The Chinese title, literally translated as "Ran Over A Sheep", sounded hilarious in a droll type way. I made it down to my local arthouse theater to check out Jinpa, not knowing anything about this film beforehand.

The story begins with Jinpa, a truck driver dressed like a Tibetan rockstar in perpetual sunglasses (much like Wong Kar Wai himself) and covered in Johnny Depp accessories. He drives solo transporting cargo across the Kekexili Plateau listening to O Sole Mio on cassette.

He hears a violent thud from the bottom of his truck. Upon inspection, he discovers he accidentally ran over a sheep. It's eerily strange seeing that there is nothing for miles on the barren highway. Feeling remorseful for the accidental life he took, he loads the dead sheep onto his truck.

Later down the road, Jinpa picks up a stranger (Genden Phuntsok), a man decked out in traditional Tibetan garb with a big shiny knife dangling over his thigh. Initially taciturn, the stranger later reveals to Jinpa that he has located the man who murdered his father a decade ago and is now on a quest for revenge. The stranger reveals his name is also Jinpa.

They eventually reach a fork at the road and the two men go their separate ways. He heads to a monastery, makes a donation and asks the monk to pray for the sheep's soul. He (very ironically) purchases half a sheep at a local market as a present to his girlfriend for a night of love but is unable to perform. Jinpa is still troubled by the death of the sheep and now the prospect of the stranger committing murder.

He sets off to the town the stranger went to prevent the murder and settles into a local teahouse for inquiry. The flirtatious owner of the teahouse (Sonam Wangmo) gives him an account of what happened the day before with the stranger in a dreamy flashback. From there, things start to get ambiguous.

Is this all a dream? Are the two men Jungian halves of the same person? Or perhaps these are past-life memories? Or are we talking about parallel universes here?

Writer-Director Pema Tseden could have just as easily written a poem. He enriches this simple plot by telling it visually and brings out its meditative themes front and center. The part where the stranger reveals his story in the truck, the truck driver and the stranger's heads are cut in half on each side of the frame. At the center of the frame lies the dead sheep at the back of the truck, literally placing death at the center.

Cinematographer Songye Lu utilizes the natural beauty of the Tibetan seemingly-infinite landscapes and it evokes the feeling of a Western. Birds fly and life moves along at its actual pace. The interior scenes are photographed in a more stylized dreamier fashion like an amnesiac recalling a vague memory. The locations are not representing actual geographical places but more rather, a state of mind.

This film was reminiscent of Jim Jarmusch's Dead Man in that it was a spiritual road movie where the main character goes through a series of trials, shedding parts of himself along the way. The outward journey is the inner journey.

The lead actor who plays the driver, whose name is also Jinpa in real life, primarily acts with his body and speaking very little words, delivers an understated lead performance. With an arresting silent presence that of a Sergio Leone type hero, actor Jinpa creates a captivating interplay with the two other lead players of the cast, Genden Phuntsok and Sonam Wangmo.

At a runtime of 89 tight minutes, Jinpa is an ultra-slow paced film, but justifiably so. The script acts like a Zen koan, posing an unanswerable question that forces the viewer to reflect upon the question more than finding the actual answer. It demands a certain level of participation beyond casual viewing. Clues are littered for the viewer to find and interpret what's going on. You meditate along with the title character and self-reflect whether you yourself are the revenge murderous type.

Having had the fortune of visiting Tibet, life is indeed slow there. From the high altitude, you take a break for every few steps you make on the streets of Lhasa and it forces you into a deep thoughtful place. At least that was my experience and I recalled that feeling here. What's perhaps Jinpa's biggest artistic achievement is it presents a piece of Tibetan culture and uses the narrative to present their cultural values.

Admittedly, it was challenging fighting the urge to nod off at times. Its pacing will naturally hinder the film's mainstream appeal and that's unfortunate. For arthouse audiences that will appreciate such a meditative experience, it's a rewarding viewing. Initially, I walked out uncomprehensive of what I had just seen, but the story stayed in my mind and things became clearer and deeper the more I contemplated about its life and death themes. And I'm still thinking about it.
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