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Review
Durian
Durian
Resource: Contemporary
World Cinema
Written
by Noah Cowan
"The
durian is a very strange tropical fruit. People either love it or
hate it. Just as people are entranced or repulsed by Portland Street
and its inhabitants."Fruit Chan
If
the young boy in Little Cheung represents the fear and paranoia
Hong Kong feels toward China, Durian Durians female protagonists
could well embody the mainlands wary unsure reply.
Fan
ekes out her existence scrubbing dishes in a Hong Kong back alley.
Her visa has expired but she has remained, a vital source of income
for her family along with her one-legged father, a smuggler.
Yan
was born in Northern China and has come to Hong Kong for the same
reason as Fanto make money. She becomes the hardest working
prostitute in town, turning as many tricks as her three-month visa
allows. She trudges many times a day through the alley where Fan
works, moving from one cheap hotel to another. One day the pimp
accompanying hera dumb teenage gangstergets his head
smashed from behind in a random act of violence. The weapon is a
strange, spiky fruit known as the "durian." Soon after,
Fans father brings home a durian as a special birthday treat.
The terrible smell of the thing is not made better by its sweet
taste.
Once
her three months are up, Yan returns to northern China, having befriended
the little girl. She is now estranged from her fiancé and
her past, unhappy with the cold and constrained lifestyle awaiting
her. She is imprisoned by the radical choices she has made, which
divorce her from her comfortably middle-class destiny.
A
much more deliberate and brooding film than Little Cheung, Durian
Durian masterfully shifts mood from the frenetic Hong Kong of the
first half to the uncomfortable, stolid realities of Mainland China
in the second. Much connects Chans two flms and much is left
open for debate.
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