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Building an elliptical romance around 22 years' worth of footage, Jia revisits some of the most pivotal characters and places ...
Jia Zhangke’s “Caught by the Tides” is less than two hours long and yet contains nearly a quarter century of time’s ...
A review of Caught by the Tides, the latest film from Jia Zhang-Ke, opening in select Canadian cities starting Friday, May, 9 ...
"Sorry… Forget this is New York, not Beijing," laughed Jia Zhang-Ke, a titan of Chinese cinema's post-1990 "Sixth Generation" of directors, to a packed house inside ...
Jia Zhangke has audiences dip into slow cinema with his tale, filmed over decades, of a couple pulled apart while searching ...
Here’s a synopsis courtesy of the New York Film Festival: “The preeminent dramatist of China’s rapid 21st-century growth and social transformation, Jia Zhang-ke has taken his boldest ...
In Pingyao, I could tell, they do things differently. Zhang himself appeared on stage in the festival’s main outdoor venue—a stadium-like space named after Jia Zhangke’s masterpiece Platform (2000)—in ...
In this roundtable conversation, members of the J-Med–NEJM Catalyst supplemental issue editorial board discuss integrating ...
Director Jia Zhang-Ke returns with a sprawling portrait of romantic destiny culled from 22 years of footage with “Caught by the Tides,” his latest collaboration with his wife and muse Zhao Tao. Here, ...