Cui Shunji is one of over 2 million ethnic Koreans in China. With her little son, she rents a small concrete hut in an industrial town somewhere in the north of China. Day and night, she is disturbed by the shouting and giggling of the prostitutes who work by the railway. Her husband is in jail. Without any official permit, Cui Shunji scrapes together a living by selling kimchi, the Korean national dish. Things change slightly to her advantage when she gets hold of a permit from a friendly policeman, and also has an affair with the married Kim, another Chinese Korean. When their relationship is discovered, Kim tries to save his marriage. This is followed by a dramatic series of events that lead to revenge. The denouement of Grain in Ear is based on a true story. The film illustrates how women always lose out through sex, social class and economic position - even when they take revenge. Zhang's film is a beautiful formalist melodrama. While the film is a little less dry and tragic than his feature début Tang Poetry, in Grain in Ear the camera does not move either until the final scene. And the visitor has to carry on listening closely for a little while after the screen goes black... With Grain in Ear, Zhang Lu took the major award at the latest Pusan Festival. (GT)
- Director
- Zhang Lu
- Countries of production
- China, South Korea
- Year
- 2005
- Festival Edition
- IFFR 2006
- Length
- 109'
- Medium
- 35mm
- Original title
- Mang zhong
- Languages
- Mandarin, Korean
- Producers
- Doo Entertainment Co.Ltd, Shu Film Workshop, Choi Doo-Young, Guan Qin
- Sales
- Doo Entertainment Co.Ltd
- Screenplay
- Zhang Lu
- Cinematography
- Liu Yonghong
- Editor
- Kim Sun-Min
- Cast
- Liu Lianji, Jin Bo