Pink Dream
Pink Dream (Chinese: 粉红色的梦/粉紅色的夢; pinyin: Fěn hóng sè de mèng) is a 1932 Chinese silent film and an early film by director Cai Chusheng. A melodrama, the film's pointed critique of the decadent urban lifestyle was nevertheless met with criticism by Shanghai's progressives, who regarded the film itself as decadent and excessively influenced by American cinema, particularly the film's numerous scenes of Shanghai's dance halls.[1] Today the film is generally regarded as Cai's last film before his turn towards more overtly leftist films.[2]
Pink Dream | |
---|---|
Traditional | 粉紅色的夢 |
Simplified | 粉红色的梦 |
Mandarin | Fěn hóng sè de mèng |
Directed by | Cai Chusheng |
Written by | Cai Chusheng |
Starring | Gao Zhanfei Zheng Junli |
Cinematography | Zhou Ke |
Production company | Lianhua Film Company |
Release date |
|
Running time | 83 minutes |
Country | China |
Language | Silent with Chinese intertitles |
It is sometimes translated as A Dream in Pink. An extant print of the film is maintained by the China Film Archives.
Plot
Pink Dream tells the story of a young novelist who is supported by a loving and hard-working wife. The novelist, however, is drawn to the decadent life of a socialite who introduces him to the dance halls that dot Shanghai. As the film progresses, the novelist soon learns of the emptiness of this urban existence and rejects it as a "pink dream."
Notes
- Zhang, p. 260
- Zhang, p. 258
References
- Zhang, Zhen. An Amorous History of the Silver Screen: Shanghai Cinema, 1896-1937. University of Chicago Press (2005). ISBN 0-226-98238-6.