|
Mr. Tree takes a long time to give us any idea what it is about. It seems to be the story about the everyday life of a man in rural China. You are not entirely sure what is wrong with Shu Wang Baoqiang plays the part full of facial tics and hyperactive arm movements, which gives you the impression he has cerebral palsy or some neurological disorder, while other characters less than charitably refer to him as a retard. The plot follows the various things that happen as Shu interacts with the people he knows around the community, tries to find a job and becomes involved in his cousins wedding. This section is perhaps more interesting as a Westerner for its portrait of modern China such as where mining companies have the power to be able to order the relocation of entire towns (where vans drive through the streets with loudspeakers bribing people to move with offers of colour television sets), the presence of petty gangland activities, the traditions of a rural Chinese wedding, of how prevalent Chinas pollution problems are the town seems to lack any trace of greenery, for instance, not to mention that everyone in the film seems to have a major smoking problem (not a scene seems to go by without somebody lighting up or puffing on a cigarette). The film eventually develops a plot of sorts when Wang Baoqiang starts to court deaf-mute Tan Zhuo. Her petulant responses and gradual warming to him has some appeal and here the film appears to segue into a relationship drama. The oddity of the film is that just when life starts to work out for the two of them, which would normally be the final act of a more traditional Western film, Mr. Tree takes a veer off into weirdness. Just before the wedding, Wang Baoqiang has visions of the ghosts of his dead father and brother turning up to offer warnings. He then gets rotten drunk and has a fight with his brother, before staggering off ceremonially carrying his bride off over his shoulder where we get a sense that things are starting to go wrong. She leaves him soon after upon discovering that the water has been turned off where they live. Shus ghosts continue to advise him, including telling him to hurry and get her back, while giving him clairvoyant advice about problems that will occur with the mine. These make his standing in the community rise and he is eventually made the mayor of the village. In the end scene, Tan Zhuo reconciles with him and they walk across a field hand-in-hand before a cut to a friends point-of-view where we see there is nobody beside him at all. We get the impression from the final shot that everything that has happened since Tan Zhuo left has been inside Wang Baoqiangs imagination. It is an odd downer of an ending that makes for a film that puzzles far more than it ever gives a clear impression of what it is trying to say.
(Screening at the Vancouver International Film Festival)
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||