THE CHINESE GRETA GARBO AND SOME OF EUROPE’S EARLIEST MOVING PICTURES

Today at the Pordenone Silent Film Festival, online this year, features China in the leading role. At 8:30 pm Italian time, and then available online for 24 hours, we present a 1935 film from Beijing’s China Film Archive, Guofeng [National Customs], directed by Luo Mingyou and Zhu Shilin. This is the story of two country sisters whose lives take different paths after they leave high school, one worldly and the other strictly virtuous, following the principles of the New Life Movement promoted by the government of the time. Beyond a relatively simple plot, the film is remarkable for its sophisticated set designs, costumes and production, and for the talents of the two actresses, Li Lili e Ruan Lingyu; the latter was so popular that she was referred to as the Chinese Greta Garbo. Guofeng was the diva’s last film: she committed suicide aged 25 – just before the release of the film, which was dedicated to her memory – because of sensational rumours about her private life. Nowadays her tragic fate recalls that of Marilyn Monroe more than Greta Garbo.
Director Zhu Shilin was also a prominent figure in Chinese film of the period, combining the elegance and aesthetic sensibility of classic cinema with a modern handling of the camera, changing rhythm when required by the narrative.

Guofeng is preceded on the same day (starting at 5 pm Italian time) by The Brilliant Biograph, a compilation of 50 shorts from between 1897 and 1902, each lasting about one minute, selected from the 68 mm Mutoscope and Biograph holdings at the EYE Filmmuseum in Amsterdam and the British Film Institute in London, which together with New York’s MoMA own the greatest collections of these films, all startling in their visual quality. The experience unfolds in five thematic sections, each revealing the main aspects of life at the turn of the twentieth century: urban life, leisure, tourism, technological innovation, and vaudeville. This extraordinary programme had its world premiere just over one month ago, on 31 August, at the Eye Filmmuseum Amsterdam, and will soon be launched on a world tour.
Given the brevity of these shorts, any musical accompaniment presents a true challenge, and this has been brilliantly overcome by pianist Daan van den Hurk, who was commissioned to produce a score. The Brilliant Biograph also offers an appendix to the festival’s inaugural Urge to Travel programme, with journeys continuing to Amsterdam, Berlin, Paris, Venice, and Pompeii, among others.

Director Jay Weissberg will be joined after today’s films for live discussion about The Brilliant Biograph’s content and its conservation by Elif Rongen-Kaynakçi and Frank Roumen of the EYE Filmmuseum, Bryony Dixon of the BFI, and musician Daan van den Hurk. Guofeng will be discussed by Victor Fan, Senior Lecturer at King’s College London, and musician Gabriel Thibaudeau.

The Pordenone Silent Film Festival takes place thanks to the support of the Regione Autonoma Friuli Venezia Giulia, the Ministero per i Beni e le Attività Culturali – Direzione Generale per il Cinema, the  City di Pordenone, the Pordenone-Udine Chamber of Commerce and the Fondazione Friuli.

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