24 City

2008 Drama

When the state-owned Factory 420 becomes a luxury apartment complex known as "24 City," the stories of three generations and eight characters meld together to offer an intimate glimpse into the history of China. The line between documentary and fiction blurs as the towering factories on which socialism was built are dismantled and employees are laid off, paving the way for a free-market economy. Located in Sichuan's capital city of Chengdu, the 420 plant used to produce airplane engines. For more than 50 years, it was the center of life for hundreds of workers. Now, as builders prepare to transform the factory into luxury condos, interviews with real workers and ex-workers are intercut with vignettes about a lonely Shanghai woman (Joan Chen) exiled in Chengdu, a mother (Lu Liping) who lost her son on the long trip from Shenyang, and a young professional (Zhao Tao) pondering the uncertain fate faced by her elderly working-class parents. more..

Director: Jia Zhang Ke

Starring: Joan Chen, Lu Liping, Zhao Tao, Chen Jianbin, Jiang Shanshan

Reviews

  • The stories we hear in 24 City belong to its specific place, but they are universal.

    Michael Phillips - The Chicago Tribune

    29 November 2012

  • The actors in 24 City bring their own existential realities to their short, touching performances. In the end, the deep emotions they stir up -- the actress Lv Liping delivers a harrowing story about a lost child -- constitute another kind of monument to the workers of Factory 420.

    Manohla Dargis - The New York Times

    29 November 2012

  • The new film, shot in vivid hi-def video, is part documentary and part fiction based on interviews; it uses on-camera interviews with workers, some played by themselves and some played by actors, to evoke a past of unimaginable toil, and suffering, in the service of the Communist state.

    Joe Morgenstern - The Wall Street Journal

    29 November 2012

  • Jia Zhangke is one of the world's preeminent filmmakers, an essentially contemplative director whose considerable talent is further amplified by the significance of his material--namely, everyday life in the most dynamic economy on earth.

    J. Hoberman - Village Voice

    29 November 2012

  • Beautiful and challenging documentary.

    Jonathan Rosenbaum - Chicago Reader

    29 November 2012

Awards

  • Best Cinematographer

    Asian Film Awards (2009)

     
  • Zhang Ke Jia

    Cannes Film Festival (2008)