The reason he won the prize is that the western jury saw in the movie "Still
Life" the capacity of Chinese people to take the initiative in their lives,
Chinese director Jia Zhangke, who won the Golden Lion for Best Film at the
Venice Film Festival, said Monday.
"The jury told me they saw Chinese people's capacity for action, their
ability to stay in control of their lives despite problems and difficulties,"
Jia, still in Venice and heading for the Toronto film festival to promote the
film, told Xinhua in a telephone call Monday.
"They also said the film conveys a sense of direct communication like a
caress on the skin and expresses the complexities of human nature through a
simple plot," he added.
"Still Life" follows two separated couples who meet again in the Yangtze
River town of Fengjie. One chooses to reunite while the other chooses to part.
Jia is adept at the documentary-like portrayal of simple peopleor social
outcasts in towns and cities - the thief in "Pickpocket'(1997), young artists in
"Platform" (2000), children of laid-off workers in "Unknown Pleasures" (2002)
and migrant workers in "The World" (2004).
"Still Life" is true to his focus on the ordinary lives of ordinary people in
contemporary China, Jia said. However, the characters in the film are more
active in pursuing what they want while those in his former works are often more
constrained.
"The entire movie is about making choices. The main characters obtain their
freedom and dignity by making their own decisions about love," he said.
In Chinese film history, only Zhang Yimou, torchbearer of the "Fifth
Generation" of Chinese directors, had previously won Golden Lion awards - for
"Qiu Ju Goes to Court" in 1992 and "Not One Less" in 1999. Jia is a leading
director of the "Sixth Generation."
"This prize means international acclaim for young Chinese directors, and what
made me happiest is the respect westerners showed for the Chinese people the
film portrayed," Jia said.
"The beauty of the cinematography and the quality of the story, without
getting political, the characters, we were very touched and we were very moved,"
French actress Catherine Deneuve, who headed the jury that awarded the top
prize, told reporters in Venice earlier.
"I believe audiences in our country will also love this film for its real and
direct portrayal of ordinary people. It's very close to Chinese audiences," Jia
said.