Screened as part of NZIFF 2023

Only the River Flows 2023

He bian de cuo wu

Directed by Wei Shujun Widescreen

This stylish neo noir from upcoming Chinese director Wei Shujun finds a long-suffering detective questioning his methods and eventually his mind after a series of mysterious murders in a small rural town.

Aug 04
Sold Out

Light House Cinema Cuba

Aug 07
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Embassy Deluxe

Aug 10
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Light House Cinema Petone

China In Mandarin with English subtitles
101 minutes Colour / DCP

Director

Producers

Tang Xiaohui
,
Dorothy Zeng
,
Li Chan

Screenplay

Kang Chunlei
,
Wei Shujun. Based on the novel by Yu Hua

Cinematography

Chengma Zhiyuan

Editor

Matthieu Laclau

Production Designer

Zhang Menglun

Costume Designer

Su Chao

Cast

Zhu Yilong
,
Chloe Maayan
,
Hou Tianlai
,
Tong Linkai

Festivals

Cannes (Un Certain Regard) 2023

Elsewhere

“A film noir that’s so vintage it comes wrapped in crackling celluloid and old cassette tapes, Only the River Flows follows one obsessive detective’s long and elusive hunt for a serial killer in 1990s provincial China, and the effect it has on a small town with plenty of secrets lurking beneath the surface.

Written and directed by Shujun Wei, the movie is less a nail-biting thriller than a puzzle-like homage to the noir genre itself, with echoes of Jean-Pierre Melville, Chinatown and Memories of Murder. But even more so, it’s a portrait of Chinese society before the recent economic boom and in the wake of the Tiananmen Square protests, at a time when citizens lead repressed lives of quiet desperation.” — Jordan Mintzer, Hollywood Reporter

“Imagine the gleaming surfaces of Park Chan-wook’s terrific Decision to Leave stripped of romance, all scuzzed-up and grimy. Imagine drilling down through Diao Yinan’s Berlin-winning Black Coal, Thin Ice and finding unexpected seams of absurdist dark comedy. You are now somewhere in the seamy offbeat world of Only the River Flows director Wei Shujun’s inventive riff on Asian-noir that gives the expanding subgenre something its Chinese contributions often lack: a pitch-black sense of humour.” — Jessica Kiang, Variety