
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


For much of his career, Jia Zhangke’s films were officially banned in his home country, China. But through austere, realist movies like Still Life, Platform, and The World, Jia became one of the most celebrated directors on the international arthouse circuit.
His latest film, Ash Is Purest White, appears at first to be a conventional mob epic, focused on a “gangster’s moll” character played magnificently by Zhao Tao. But with a story beginning in 2001 and spanning 17 years, the movie is just as much about the effects of the rapid growth of China’s economy on its society. The dramatic changes led some working-class Chinese to form criminal brotherhoods for support.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By PRX4.5
666666 ratings
For much of his career, Jia Zhangke’s films were officially banned in his home country, China. But through austere, realist movies like Still Life, Platform, and The World, Jia became one of the most celebrated directors on the international arthouse circuit.
His latest film, Ash Is Purest White, appears at first to be a conventional mob epic, focused on a “gangster’s moll” character played magnificently by Zhao Tao. But with a story beginning in 2001 and spanning 17 years, the movie is just as much about the effects of the rapid growth of China’s economy on its society. The dramatic changes led some working-class Chinese to form criminal brotherhoods for support.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

91,086 Listeners

44,008 Listeners

38,472 Listeners

6,689 Listeners

43,576 Listeners

38,739 Listeners

27,226 Listeners

26,175 Listeners

11,613 Listeners

324 Listeners

9,178 Listeners

3,939 Listeners

929 Listeners

8,291 Listeners

464 Listeners

1,966 Listeners

308 Listeners

470 Listeners

1,287 Listeners

3,766 Listeners

2,619 Listeners

944 Listeners

322 Listeners

1,896 Listeners

1,550 Listeners