A gentle but gorgeously photographed short documentary, QUIETLY seems to offer some correctives to current tales of social or humanitarian injustices within the vast lands of China. A handful of artlessly handled interviews with hard-working women from the distant province of Xinjiang reveal a country where the traditional and contemporary ways of life seem to blend smoothly, even successfully.
A dutiful daughter is packing cotton for despatch, picked in the enormous fields of her native area, which provides 80% of cotton crops in China, while China remains the world's leading source of the natural product.
But there are new tariffs being imposed that will restrict their sales.
A middle-aged widow has come to the huge city of Yiwu, also hailing from Xinjiang, and in seven years has not only raised three children after the death of her husband, but runs a popular modest restaurant. (Alluring foods, and fabulous-looking meals stud the half-hour narrative of this documentary short, whether cooked in the home or enjoyed in restaurant feasts).
Another lady from Xinjiang has married an Afghan who runs a shipping company. One of the women is also a flourishing online coach, who recalls how when much younger in Beijing she was asked if children still went to school on a camel in her homeland. Another insists the Uyghurs can follow their own lives and Muslim women have more or less equal status now with men.
The film has been capably directed by a French film-maker, Benoit Lelievre, deftly inserting some picturesque glimpses of landscape, music and dance, that pleasingly contrast with the startling modern metropolises of this far-flung outpost of Cathay.
27 minutes, English sub-titles
Phillip Bergson
10.11.2021 | Ripples's blog