Assembly | 憂鬱之島 Blue Island Film Screening
Presented by ANU College of Asia & the Pacific
This screening is part of the Assembly exhibition.
Blue Island 憂鬱之島 by Chan Tze-woon (2022, 97 min)
These are all stories of youth. A young man preferred to risk swimming across the raging sea towards a safe haven in order to avoid being caught up in the Cultural Revolution on the mainland. Another young man resisting colonialism was imprisoned for printing patriotic periodicals during the riots, and was long forgotten by the country after his release. A third youth went to Beijing to support students' demands for freedom, only to see their dreams and bodies crushed under the treads of tanks.
The beliefs and ideals held by each generation are eventually submerged by the deluge of history. How do these generations recall, confront, and narrate their irreversible fates? The film documents three real-life characters who engaged in rebellions when they were young. Through reconstructing these events, the film dramatizes their scarred memories and experiences by using four young people who participated in the 2019 Anti-extradition Law Amendment Movement in Hong Kong. These real protagonists are separated by time and history, yet their lives parallel and overlap, because they have similarly defiant backgrounds and find themselves the same chaotic predicaments.
Images flow between documentary and drama, blending archival materials, interviews and behind-the-scenes footage, weaving an expansive tapestry that encompasses these tumultuous eras...
How do the young people of this city envision their future today? What do they think about this seemingly unwinnable revolution?
Location
The Australian National University Cultural Centre
Acton, ACT, 2601
Contact
- Chin-Jie Melodie Liu0261259267