The Road Home

1999 Drama

Following on the heels of director Zhang Yimou's Not One Less (1999), which won the top prize at the 1999 Venice Film Festival, comes this sensitively-wrought portrait of a young woman's unshakable love. The film opens in the present, shot in gritty black and white, as businessman Luo Yusheng (Sun Honglei) returns to his hometown in the rural Hebei province to attend the funeral of his father. When Luo suggests that the coffin should be brought home from the hospital on a tractor, his aging mother Zhao Di (Zhao Yuelin) rebuffs him, insisting that they conform to custom and have it carried home by local men. Later, as Luo recalls his parent's courtship, the film switches to color and travels back in time about 40 years. A young, beautiful Zhao Di (Zhang Ziyi) find herself falling for the village's handsome new teacher Luo Changyu (Zheng Hao). As the males in the village join together to build a school for the burg, Zhao Di helps the other women prepare food, waiting patiently to meet the strapping educator. Just as their romance begins, Luo is suddenly ordered to leave by the Communist authorities. As Luo packs up and leaves the village, Zhao Di races hither and thither carrying his favorite steamed dumplings, hoping to catch him before he departs. Though the odds of reunion seem slim, Zhao Di steadfastly holds vigil for her lover until miraculously, Luo returns under the cover of the night only to be once again ordered to the city where he has been commanded to stay. The pair are forced to wait another two years until they can be together. This film won the prestigious Silver Bear at the 2000 Berlin Film Festival and the World Cinema Audience Award at the 2001 Sundance Film Festival; the victories were all the more sweet for the director, as The Road Home was rejected outright from the 1999 Cannes Film Festival, prompting Zhang to angrily withdraw his Not One Less from competition. more..

Director: Zhang Yimou

Starring: Zhang Ziyi, Sun Honglei, Zheng Hoa, Zhao Yuelin, Li Bin

Reviews

  • A gorgeous film with a vision strong enough to sustain heart-tugging, heightened by San Bao's romantic score, that verges on the sentimental.

    Kevin Thomas - Los Angeles Times

    20 January 2013

  • A beautifully textured, disarmingly simple movie about romantic devotion.

    Desson Thomson - The Washington Post

    20 January 2013

  • The result is an enchanting story of love from an idealized past that endures in the mundane present.

    Joe Morgenstern - The Wall Street Journal

    20 January 2013

  • This is a gentle, engaging narrative of constancy and devotion against all odds, both natural and bureaucratic, in which the past represents enduring family values and customs.

    Lisa Schwarzbaum - Entertainment Weekly

    20 January 2013

  • A cinematic ballad of such seamless construction and exquisite tonal balance it transcends most of the pitfalls of movies that aspire to a classic, lyric simplicity.

    Stephen Holden - The New York Times

    20 January 2013

Awards

  • Competition

    Berlin International Film Festival (2000)

  • Best Non-American Film (Bedste ikke amerikanske film)

    Bodil Awards (2001)

     
  • Best Foreign Language Film

    Chicago Film Critics Association Awards (2002)

     
  • Best Foreign Film (Mejor Película Extranjera)

    Cinema Writers Circle Awards, Spain (2001)

     
  • Best Foreign-Language Film

    Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Association Awards (2002)