Do Not Split (2020) Poster

(2020)

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8/10
Bravo
yoggwork26 April 2021
Hats off to all the fighters against fascism, against the anti-human regime, against communism, against CCP.
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6/10
A full feature pls?
stephenstephenbyrne10 July 2021
Really liked what was here but wanted it to go further, it felt so slight!
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9/10
By #HongKongFree...
RosanaBotafogo3 April 2021
Protests driven by China's authoritarian colonial government, in search of democracy, and which took on ethnic proportions, Chinese vs Hongkonger... Very brave the girl who appears in the documentary, taking serious risks of retaliation on the part of the government, I admire people of courage, in the face of my cowardice... Free from British rule, but hostage to China... By #HongKongLFree...
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9/10
it's a tense time
lee_eisenberg3 February 2022
Anders Sømme Hammer's Academy Award-nominated "Do Not Split" focuses on Hong Kong's 2019 protests against a proposed extradition law imposed by China. It contains some intense scenes, as the protesters have no choice but to get tough on the police. Sure enough, a certain pandemic forced the protests to end.

It's a short but harrowing documentary. It reminds us that vigilance and action are the price of democracy.
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10/10
best documentary ever
juniorx-839789 May 2021
Warning: Spoilers
A documentary created with blood, sweat and tears.
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3/10
teenagers
qqml2 May 2021
Those teenagers are too simple, sometimes naive. Those who experienced culture revolution and 64 wouldn't bother.
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Hongkong Streetwise
Cineanalyst1 July 2021
This Oscar-nominated documentary short is a good and brief overview, or rather street-level view, of the protests and clashes with police in Hong Kong since 2019, the extradition bill and the general end of autonomy in the former colony of the British Empire since handed over to become a colony of China's empire. Chapter-like title cards provide some exposition, but otherwise the picture relies on interviews and an observational approach of merely recording the violent confrontations. One may also see the crafty use by the pro-democracy movement of umbrellas and, even before COVID-19, masks. Indeed, one of the many eerie scenes here is especially so because of how much it seemingly anticipates flag fetishist and presidential cultists counter-protesting masks and democracy in, let's say, other parts of the world during the pandemic.

I've only seen three of the Oscar nominated documentary shorts thus far, but from what I've seen, I would've preferred "Do Not Split" had won. It's not only the more politically-challenging picture; it's also better made. My only slight reservations are its title, which I understand to refer to the protesters, but which also has the unfortunate connotation of seeming to refer to the unification of China, and its opening title cards referring to a tradition of non-violent protest seems out of place, to say the least, followed as it is by footage of a bank being lit on fire and the continued fire bombing in response to police brutality later. Still, it's an important subject, and the Academy nominating it at least reportedly brought enough attention to the plight of Hong Kong, along with whatever perturbation they have with the maker of "Nomadland" (2020), to throw the Chinese Communist Party into a boycott tizzy over the Oscars.
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