To Live
Fugui loses all of his fortunes due to his gambling addiction and struggles to raise his family with his wife Jiazhen in 1940s China.
This movie is available to Watch Here
OR
Choose a Streaming Service :
Through YouTalkies, you are able to link/access to other websites; we don't have control over the nature, content, and availability of those sites. Additionally, it's important to clarify that content available on our platform is not stored/hosted/owned by us. We just connect the content available on the internet to our watch now button, and this does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them. By using our site or its features, you agree to be responsible and adhere to our policy agreement.
If you have any issue with the content ⚠️ Report
Cast
Crew
Summary
To Live, also titled Lifetimes in some English versions, is a 1994 Chinese drama film directed by Zhang Yimou and written by Lu Wei, based on the novel of the same name by Yu Hua. It was produced by the Shanghai Film Studio and ERA International, starring Ge You and Gong Li, in her seventh collaboration with director Zhang Yimou.
The film looks back on four generations of the Xu family: Xu Fugui, played by Ge You; his father, a wealthy landowner; his wife, Jiazhen, played by Gong Li; their daughter, Fengxia, and son, Youqing; and finally their grandson, Little Bun. The action goes from the Chinese Civil War in the late 1940s to the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s and 1970s. The film, like many examples of fiction and film in the 1970s and 1980s, demonstrates the difficulties of the common Chinese, but ends when conditions are seemingly improving in the 1980s.
To Live was screened at the 1994 New York Film Festival before eventually receiving a limited release in the United States on November 18, 1994. The film has been used in the United States as a support to teach Chinese history in high schools and colleges.
Having achieved international success with his previous films (Ju Dou and Raise the Red Lantern), director Zhang Yimou’s To Live came with high expectations, and lived up to it, receiving critical acclaim. It is the first Chinese film that had its foreign distribution rights pre-sold. Furthermore, To Live brought home the Grand Prix, Prize of the Ecumenical Jury, and Best Actor Award (Ge You) from the 1994 Cannes Film Festival, the highest major international awards Zhang Yimou has ever won.
The Film was denied a theatrical release in mainland China by the Chinese State Administration of Radio, Film, and Television due to its critical portrayal of policies and campaigns.
Plot
In the 1940s, Xu Fugui, a rich man’s son and compulsive gambler, loses his family property to a man named Long’er. His father dies after signing over the family house to Long’er, and wife Jiazhen, leaves him, along with their daughter, Fengxia, and their unborn son, Youqing. Long’er does, however, give Fugui a set of shadow puppets. He starts a shadow puppet troupe with a partner named Chunsheng. The Chinese Civil War is occurring at the time, and Fugui and Chunsheng are conscripted into the Kuomintang’s Republic of China armed forces during a performance. Midway through the war, the two are captured by the communist People’s Liberation Army and earn a certificate of commendation for performing their shadow puppet operas for the communist revolutionaries. After the Communist victory, Fugui returns home, only to find out that due to a week-long fever, Fengxia has become mute and partially deaf.
Soon after his return, Fugui learns that Long’er burned all his property just to deny the new regime from seizing it. No one helped put out the fire because Long’er was a gentry. He is eventually put on trial and sentenced to execution. As Long’er is pulled away, he recognizes Fugui in the crowd and tries to talk to him as he is dragged toward the execution grounds. Realizing that Long’er’s fate would have been his if not for his “misfortune” years earlier, Fugui is filled with fear and runs into an alleyway before hearing five gunshots. He runs home to tell Jiazhen what has happened, and they quickly pull out the certificate stating that Fugui served in the communist People’s Liberation Army. Jiazhen assures him they are no longer gentries and will not be killed.
The story moves forward a decade into the future, to the time of the Great Leap Forward. The local town chief enlists everyone to donate all scrap iron to the national drive to produce steel and make weaponry for invading Taiwan. As an entertainer, Fugui performs for the entire town nightly, and is very smug about his singing abilities.
Soon after, some boys begin picking on Fengxia. Youqing decides to get back at one of the boys by dumping spicy noodles on his head during a communal lunch. Fugui is furious, but Jiazhen stops him and tells him why Youqing acted the way he did. Fugui realizes the love his children have for each other.
The children are exhausted from the hard labor they are doing in the town and try to sleep whenever they can. They eventually get a break during the festivities for meeting the scrap metal quota. The entire village eats dumplings in celebration. In the midst of the family eating, schoolmates of Youqing call for him to come prepare for the District Chief. Jiazhen tries to make Fugui let him sleep but eventually relents and packs her son twenty dumplings for lunch. Fugui carries his son to the school, and tells him to heat the dumplings before eating them, as he will get sick if he eats cold dumplings. He must listen to his father to have a good life.
Later on in the day, the older men and students rush to tell Fugui that his son has been killed by the District Chief. He was sleeping on the other side of a wall that the Chief’s Jeep was on, and the car ran into the wall, injuring the Chief and crushing Youqing. Jiazhen, in hysterics, is forbidden to see her son’s dead body, and Fugui screams at his son to wake up. Fengxia is silent in the background.
The District Chief visits the family at the grave, only to be revealed as Chunsheng. His attempts to apologize and compensate the family are rejected, particularly by Jiazhen, who tells him he owes her family a life. He returns to his Jeep in a haze, only to see his guard restraining Fengxia from breaking the Jeep’s windows. He tells the guard to stop and walks home.
The story moves forward again another decade, to the Cultural Revolution. The village chief advises Fugui’s family to burn their puppet drama props, which have been deemed as counter-revolutionary. Fengxia carries out the act, and is oblivious to the Chief’s real reason for coming: to discuss a suitor for her. Fengxia is now grown up and her family arranges for her to meet Wan Erxi, a local leader of the Red Guards. Erxi, a man crippled by a workplace accident, fixes her parents’ roof and paints depictions of Mao Zedong on their walls with his workmates. He proves to be a kind, gentle man; he and Fengxia fall in love and marry, and she soon becomes pregnant.
Chunsheng, still in the government, visits immediately after the wedding to ask for Jiazhen’s forgiveness, but she refuses to acknowledge him. Later, he is branded a reactionary and a capitalist. He comes to tell them his wife has committed suicide and he intends to as well. He has come to give them all his money. Fugui refuses to take it. However, as Chunsheng leaves, Jiazhen commands him to live, reminding him that he still owes them a life.
Months later, during Fengxia’s childbirth, her parents and husband accompany her to the county hospital. All doctors have been sent to do hard labor for being over educated, and the students are left as the only ones in charge. Wan Erxi manages to find a doctor to oversee the birth, removing him from confinement, but he is very weak from starvation. Fugui purchases seven steamed buns (mantou) for him and the family decides to name the son Mantou, after the buns. However, Fengxia begins to hemorrhage, and the nurses panic, admitting that they do not know what to do. The family and nurses seek the advice of the doctor, but find that he has overeaten and is semiconscious. The family is helpless, and Fengxia dies from postpartum hemorrhage (severe blood loss). The point is made that the doctor ate 7 buns, but that by drinking too much water at the same time, each bun expanded to the size of 7 buns: therefore Fengxia’s death is a result of the doctor’s having the equivalent of 49 buns in his belly.
The movie ends six years later, with the family now consisting of Fugui, Jiazhen, their son-in-law Erxi, and grandson Mantou. The family visits the graves of Youqing and Fengxia, where Jiazhen, as per tradition, leaves dumplings for her son. Erxi buys a box full of young chicks for his son, which they decide to keep in the chest formerly used for the shadow puppet props. When Mantou inquires how long it will take for the chicks to grow up, Fugui’s response is a more tempered version of something he said earlier in the film. He expresses optimism for his grandson’s future, and the film ends with his statement, “and life will get better and better” as the whole family sits down to eat.
Also Known As
- (original title): Huo zhe
- Argentina: Vivir
- Australia: To Live
- Brazil: Tempo de Viver
- Canada: To Live(English)
- China: 活着(Mandarin)
- Croatia: Živjeti
- Denmark: At leve
- Ecuador: Huo zhe
- Finland: Elämänkaari
- France: Vivre !
- Germany: Leben!
- Greece: Να ζεις
- Hong Kong: Woot jeuk(Cantonese)
- Hong Kong: Life Times(English, Alternative Title)
- Hungary: Élni
- India: To Live(English)
- Israel: Sippur Haim(Hebrew)
- Italy: Vivere!
- Japan: Ikiru
- Japan: 活きる(Japanese)
- Lithuania: Gyventi!
- Mexico: Vivir
- Norway: Å leve
- Poland: Żyć!
- Portugal: Viver
- Russia: Жить
- Singapore: To Live(English)
- Spain: ¡Vivir!
- Sweden: Att leva
- Taiwan: 活著
- Thailand: To Live(English)
- United Kingdom: To Live
- United States: To Live
- Vietnam: Phải Sống
- World-wide: To Live(English)
- World-wide: Lifetimes(English, Alternative Title)
- World-wide: Living(English, Alternative Title)
There are no reviews yet.