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For a decade and a half now, Zhang
Yimou's films have acted as a herald from China to the rest of the world, often arousing
the ire of the Chinese government in the process. Rarely directly political,
Zhang's films almost always can be read politically. It is understandable that
their humanistic values would be threatening to a repressive regime.
Combining the skills of an inventive storyteller with psychological
insight and an eye for images that are both strikingly beautiful and emotionally telling,
Zhang has produced a body of work that places him in the first order of world filmmakers.
His early, Academy Award-nominated, Ju
Dou was an in-your-face potboiler with images drawn from a textile-dying
mill--lush colors and billowing fabrics--that remain fresh in the mind these many years
later. Raise
the Red Lantern was the story of the fourth wife in a polygamous household in the
1920's, a story of conflict and frustration told in a claustrophobic setting that
underlined the social and emotional distress of its heroine (magnificent Gong Li, frequent
star of Zhang's films).
More recently, Not One Less,
the story of a thirteen year old challenged by the responsibility of being a school
teacher, won accolades (if not box office) and The
Road Home told the saga of a family, contrasting rural with urban values,
tradition with change. In view of these rather serious predecessors, who would have
imagined Zhang would venture into comedy?
Happy Times is a comedy, an improbable tale that leads from
one preposterous setup to the next, linked by the engaging character of its protagonist, a
fifty-year-old factory worker (Zhao Benshan) with a taste for zaftig women. A
matchmaker leads him to a willing prospect who is all too ready to get married, but she
wants a fancy wedding and names a price. Zhao is smitten and agrees, but, of course, he
doesn't have the funds. He and his friend Li come up with the idea of fixing up an
abandoned bus as an hourly hotel for trysting lovers.
Zhao's obese bride-to-be has an equally overweight son and a Cinderella
step-daughter, Wu Ying (Dong Jie), the blind, 19 year-old daughter of her last husband.
The miserable girl lives for the return of her father who promised to raise the money for
surgery to restore her sight.
It is the character of Zhao that glues the unexpected turns of the plot
together. On the one hand, he's a fundamentally decent fellow, emotionally unguarded and
vulnerable. On the other hand, when his hopes are confronted with obstacles, he responds
by weaving an ever more complicated tangle of lies in an attempt to make things work.
Whether painstakingly trimming down cheaper flowers to make a rose-like bouquet for his
intended or creating a complete stage-setting for a massage parlor in an abandoned
factory, Zhao acts out his desperate--and amusing--scenarios. The house of cards
that he builds will inevitably come tumbling down, but his sincerity and human decency
transcend the harmless follies of his plotting. And in the nicest way, the kindness
that underlies his foolishness accomplishes his purpose, with an unexpectedly gratifying
and bittersweet outcome.
Zhao Benshan is a delight as Zhao; he combines the perennial optimist
who refuses to give up his hopes and the gentle buffoon with a caring heart. His energy
and brightness energize the film. But it is Dong Jie who provides balance to the comedy in
her portrayal of Wu Ying. She mixes a sympathetic touch of pathos with an innocence
grounded with surprisingly gritty strength and good sense.
With Happy Days Zhang adds yet another notable accomplishment
to his remarkable oeuvre, demonstrating a felicitous touch in this lighter, comedic mode,
while never lessening the character-based strength of his story-telling.
- Arthur Lazere