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China Heavyweight

Play trailer Poster for China Heavyweight 2012 1h 34m Documentary Play Trailer Watchlist
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82% Tomatometer 22 Reviews 60% Popcornmeter 1,000+ Ratings
With the help of a dedicated coach, two teenagers in rural China hope to become successful professional boxers and escape from their impoverished environment.

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China Heavyweight

Critics Reviews

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Roxana Hadadi Punch Drunk Critics 01/09/2017
3.5/5
A thought-provoking work, a documentary with as much brain as it has brawn. Go to Full Review
Meredith Slifkin Film Comment Magazine 06/28/2013
Chang works within the philosophical framework of the world of boxing to paint a poignant and often incisive portrait of the evolving Chinese cultural landscape and the temptations and ambitions that come with change. Go to Full Review
Claude Peck Minneapolis Star Tribune 09/20/2012
2/4
This ain't no Rocky, and your take-aways are mostly about Chinese family and social customs. Go to Full Review
Brent Simon Shockya.com 09/26/2012
B
Award-winning filmmaker Yung Chang returns to China for another unexpectedly lyrical snapshot of that country's rapidly changing economic and cultural landscapes. Go to Full Review
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Audience Reviews

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11/26/2013 A decent documentary that immerses you into china boxing world with a simple narrative See more 06/12/2013 Interesting although there have been more interesting topics explored by film makers on the modern China and quite frankly, there are more interesting boxing stories to potentially focus on. Nonetheless, it presents a look into the development of athletes within China and the key decisions that are forced to make. See more 05/21/2013 Excellent documentary filmmaker who covers the reality of today's China with a real touch of grace. See more 07/11/2012 Another riveting documentary on that country's ever-changing economic landscape-this time through the lens of sports. See more 05/14/2012 I agree with the Globe and Mail Critic, the Torontoist blog and all those who've given this superior example of Chinese verite documentary making their highest star ratings. Its emotional, vital, vicarious and real. See more 04/20/2012 http://tiny.cc/ow32cw 'China Heavyweight' is an emotional contender In 1959, Chairman Mao banned Western-style boxing for being too American and too violent. Thirty years later, the ban was lifted. Although symptomatic of China's ameliorating progress, Canadian director Yung Chang, in his documentary, China Heavyweight, exhibits how the country has yet to purge itself of Mao's irreparable social and economic legacies. The film documents the story of two teenagers in rural Sichuan, China, hoping to become the next big thing in international boxing. Coached by the dedicated Qi Moxiang, they try to rise through the amateur level in order to become professional boxers, and to break out of their substandard social-economic situations. The best way to describe China Heavyweight is to call it the boxing equivalent of Steve James' basketball documentary, Hoop Dreams. Rife with dialectical feelings of both desperation and aspiration, Heavyweight is an essential social document on the hardships and lack of opportunity in the industrialized 'New' China. From the outset, we are introduced to Qi Moxiang and his two prodigies, Zongli He and Yunfei Miao. From watching the 'boxing kings', like Ali, De La Hoya and Tyson, both fighters are enamored by both the fame and the financial rewards of being a professional athlete. Apparently smitten by Western sports, athletes and their athletic culture, Miao and He see boxing as their livelihood, as the one vehicle that can drive them out of their "backwards" hometown and into the open arms of the rest of the world. In fact, there are many instances where people in the film are wearing Western sports paraphernalia; an attempt to live the life of professional athletes by proxy. These instances, where we see recognizable team logos and jerseys, reminds the audience of the success and prosperity of Western professional athletes, and by juxtaposing them with the poverty of Miao and He's current circumstances, we get a sense of the chasm that exists between the two cultures. Because of this, we are able to understand their motivations, and, consequently, to empathize with their struggle. And because we understand the motives, and their deep, underlying immediacy, everything they do in the film takes on a more profound meaning. When they are training, we recognize the commitment and utter determination in their physical exertions. And when they box, we get the sense that they are fighting for more than just a win; they're fighting for there futures, because if they lose, they will stay in destitution, working menial labour for the rest of their lives. As we near the end of their respective stories, the finale proves to be heart wrenching, and when we see the long line of people with similar dreams, the sense of despair and hopelessness in the film are multiplied tenfold. Following his critically acclaimed 2007 documentary, Up the Yangtze, Chang again returns to the seemingly never-ending social and economic tribulations of the 'New' China. In fact, it seems like this subject provides ample material for Chinese-Canadian filmmakers from Montreal, with Lixin Fan's 2009 documentary, Last Train Home, striking a similar cord. Although China Heavyweight doesn't pack the same punch as these films, it nevertheless succeeds in being an emotional punch in the gut See more Read all reviews
China Heavyweight

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Movie Info

Synopsis With the help of a dedicated coach, two teenagers in rural China hope to become successful professional boxers and escape from their impoverished environment.
Director
Yung Chang
Producer
Bob Moore, Peter Wintonick, Yi Han
Screenwriter
Yung Chang
Distributor
Zeitgeist
Production Co
CNEX Foundation, Channel 4 Television Corporation, Eye Steel Film, Telefilm Canada
Genre
Documentary
Original Language
Chinese
Release Date (Theaters)
Jul 6, 2012, Limited
Release Date (Streaming)
Mar 8, 2017
Box Office (Gross USA)
$10.5K
Runtime
1h 34m
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