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Unknown Pleasures

Play trailer Poster for Unknown Pleasures Released Mar 28, 2003 1h 53m Drama Play Trailer Watchlist
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61% Tomatometer 31 Reviews 68% Popcornmeter 1,000+ Ratings
An unemployed slacker (Zhao Wei Wei) grows apart from his girlfriend, while his like-minded pal (Wu Qiong) chases a woman.
Unknown Pleasures

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Critics Consensus

Unknown Pleasures tests the patience with a look at modern China that can feel as aimless as its characters' lives, but gathers real resonance as it goes along.

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Critics Reviews

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David Rooney Variety Jia creates some poignant images to convey key transitions in the characters' lives. Jan 11, 2008 Full Review Jonathan Rosenbaum Chicago Reader [Director Zhang-ke] Jia's virtuoso long takes, choreographed mise en scene, and feeling for character and behavior place him in a class by himself. Jan 11, 2008 Full Review Time Out Lays bare the tao of contemporary China, like a doctor taking a pulse. Jun 24, 2006 Full Review Yasser Medina Cinefilia Jia narrates it with a raw style that never loses its point of effect, capturing the experiences of young misfits consumed by the pleasure of cultural alienation that Chinese postmodernism brings. [Full review in Spanish] Rated: 7/10 Nov 5, 2023 Full Review David Walsh World Socialist Web Site It is precisely this resignation, this matter of factness about the state of things, that weakens the film, makes it, despite the care that has gone into it and the sensitivity of the treatment, somewhat forgettable. Feb 16, 2021 Full Review Nathanael Hood Unseen Films Zhangke's micro-vignettes about early twenty-first century China's cultural impotence on the world stage...are reminders of how far the country has come as a developing superpower. Rated: 7/10 May 8, 2020 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Audience Member love, made me feel nostalgic af Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/08/23 Full Review Audience Member A story of disaffected youth in modern-day China. Provides some interesting insights into Chinese version of Socialist society, but aside from that, not the most exciting cinematic experience. A well-made movie though, clearly influenced by Western cinema. Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 02/09/23 Full Review Audience Member The Pulp Fiction reference is cute though, kii Rated 3.5 out of 5 stars 01/27/23 Full Review Audience Member One of Jia's greatest strengths--his ability to draw upon his character's surroundings to offer insight into their psyches--is on display in full force here. Rubble and barren fields of rock contrast strongly with new construction and the busy streets of the city. The characters wander through all of these landscapes, striving for something but being turned back time and again. The last few minutes are beautifully bleak, while Jia's mise en scene and tight framing are consistently excellent. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 01/26/23 Full Review Audience Member Two unemployed slacker teenagers have no real motivation or future prospects at all. They hang out in their sheltered town in China where they spend their days aimlessly wondering about their uncertain future ahead. The most appealing aspect of Zhang Ke Jia's film is it's observation of Chinese culture and the western world's influence on this ancient civilization. The two slackers minds are full of pop music and western culture dreams completely without focus on their past or future. At times the film feels very hypnotic as these two characters feel very out of place and almost alone in a weird place, which happens to be the place they presumably have lived their entire lives creating a very real sense of alienation. The film makes this connection between a countries need to industrialize and grow in this ever changing global landscape while still holding on to tradition and purpose which Zhang Ke Jia seems to believe comes from one's past. I don't think the film is a detriment to Western Culture, not at all, but rather an examination on how these various elements can conflict in China, as it heads towards a new age of Industrialization. The whole film is very subtle, as viewer is asked to merely observe these characters. The camera-work is also very observational in it's approach, often scanning various room and/or showing smaller details of a space. This is another great observational film by Zhang Ke Jia who clearly has a lot of things to say about the social, political and economical ever-changing conditions in China. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 02/17/23 Full Review Audience Member For those who wants to witness China cinema at its best, and for those who wishes to have a peek at the modern China at its most realistic, (not Crouching Tiger, not Beijing Olympics), you need to go no further than the Homeland Trilogy by the great Jia Zhang Ke (Xiao Wu, Platform, and Unknown Pleasures). This was made 8 years ago yet it is even more relevant today. Introspect and expressionistic at the same time. Bravo! Rated 5 out of 5 stars 01/12/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Unknown Pleasures

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Movie Info

Synopsis An unemployed slacker (Zhao Wei Wei) grows apart from his girlfriend, while his like-minded pal (Wu Qiong) chases a woman.
Director
Zhang-Ke Jia
Producer
Shozo Ichiyama, Li Kit Ming
Distributor
New Yorker Films
Genre
Drama
Original Language
Chinese
Release Date (Theaters)
Mar 28, 2003, Original
Release Date (DVD)
Nov 15, 2011
Box Office (Gross USA)
$8.1K
Runtime
1h 53m
Sound Mix
Stereo