Thirteen Princess Trees

Thirteen Princess Trees
Directed by Lü Yue
Produced by Liu Jing
Wang Qingyong
Hao Jianguo
Zhao Guoguang (E.P.)
Zhou Xiaoning(E.P.)
Written by Liu Ying
Lü Yue
He Dacao (novel)
Music by Liu Sola
Cinematography Xu Wei
Edited by Yan Tao
Distributed by Forbidden City Films
Golden Network Asia (Asia & Hong Kong)
Release dates
Tokyo:
October 24, 2006
Running time
98 min.
Country China
Language Sichuanese
Mandarin

Thirteen Princess Trees (Chinese: 十三棵泡桐; Chinese: 十三棵泡桐; pinyin: shí sān kē pào tóng) is a 2006 Chinese film directed by cinematographer-cum-director Lü Yue and based on the novel Blade vs. Blade by He Dacao. The film, Lü's third as director was shot on digital video primarily in Chengdu, the capital of China's Sichuan province.

Thirteen Princess Trees was produced by Beijing Golden Skyway Media Company and the Changchun Film Studio.

The film follows several disaffected youth in the fictional Thirteen Princess High School in Chengdu. Feng (Liu Xin), the film's protagonist, is a short-haired tomboy who has a love affair with the jock, Taotao (Duan Bowen). With the arrival of Bao (Zhao Mengqiao), a student from Beijing, Feng finds herself gravitating to the new presence.

Cast

Release controversy

Thirteen Princess Trees's tale of disaffected youth was already "tamed" for the authorities before even being filmed. As compared to He Dacao's original novel, much of the film's depiction of youth delinquency and sexuality was already excised.[1]

After its win at the 19th Tokyo International Film Festival, Thirteen Princess Trees was set to be released throughout Asia. Originally set to be released in Mainland China on March 23, 2007, the film, at the last minute, was pulled by the China Film Bureau for a "second review."[1][2] Officially the reason for the delay was said to be due to delays in the transference from digital to 35 mm film,[1] although rumors remained that the film's depiction of sexuality and violence had caused authorities to reconsider their original "content" approval.[2] On the other hand, Trees' Chinese distributor, Forbidden City Films, blamed the delay on unexpectedly tight scheduling issues.[2]

Reception

Thirteen Princess Trees garnered the Special Jury Prize at the 19th Tokyo International Film Festival.[3]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Elley, Derek (2007-03-30). "Thirteen Princess Trees". Variety International. Retrieved 2007-09-07.
  2. 1 2 3 Martinsen, Joel (2007-03-24). "What's Wrong with Thirteen Princess Trees". Danwei.org. Retrieved 2007-09-08.
  3. Xinhua staff (2006-10-29). "2 Chinese movies win awards at Tokyo film festival". Xinhua News Agency. Retrieved 2007-09-08.

External links

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