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Memory Project Films: "Children's Village" and "Luo Village"

Harvard University presents a screening of the films "Children's Village" and "Luo Village".

When:
October 16, 2012 6:00pm to January 1, 1999 12:00am
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About the Memory Project
In the summer of 2009, Wu Wenguang, widely considered the godfather of independent documentary filmmaking in China, began a project to chronicle the events that took place during the “three year famine” period between 1959 and 1961. By the summer of 2010, Wu had assembled a group of 21 participating filmmakers at his Caochangdi Workstation in Beijing to contribute to this landmark “folk memory project.”

Among the filmmakers were some individuals with prior experience in documentary production, others with backgrounds in theater and the arts, as well as young university students. The participants went back to their hometowns and villages to conduct interviews and document their experiences. Since the project began, some 700 individuals coming from 17 provinces and 110 villages have been interviewed.

6:00 pm       

Children’s Village (2012)
Director Zou Xueping will be present to answer questions
The third Memory Project film Zou Xueping has made in her village, Children's Village, documents her involvement in the village's efforts to compile statistics from the Great Leap famine and construct a memorial. To her surprise, the young teenage villagers assist her in uncovering the past, and a range of questions emerge concerning the younger generation's motivations and connection to local history. (85 min., English subtitles)

7:45 pm       

Luo Village: Pitiless Earth and Sky (2012)
Director Luo Bing will be present to answer questions
Luo Bing continues his investigation into the memoir of Luo Village's peasant historian, Ren Dingqi. Once Ren finally hands over the memoir to Luo, the young director must confront difficult questions about history, suffering, and the process of producing these visual records of his village's past. (82 min., English subtitles)

Wu Wenguang was born in southwest China’s Yunnan province in 1956. After graduating from high school in 1974, he was sent to the countryside, where he worked as a farmer for four years. Between 1978 and 1982, he studied Chinese literature in Yunnan University. After his studies, Wu worked as a teacher at a junior high school, and later, worked in television as a journalist. Wu left television and moved to Beijing in 1988 to become an independent documentary filmmaker, freelance writer, and director/producer of dance and theater. Wu has completed ten documentaries, including Bumming in Beijing (1990), 1966, My Time in the Red Guards (1993), Jiang Hu: Life on the Road (1999), Fuck Cinema (2005), Treatment (2010); and his films have been screened at many prestigious film festivals around the world. He has also published four books of non-fiction.

Cost: 
Free
Phone Number: 
(617) 495-4046