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Beijing Besieged by Waste

The Asia Society and Museum will screen a film by Jiuliang Wang.

When:
October 29, 2011 3:00pm to 4:20pm
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Beijing Besieged by Waste 垃圾围城
Dir. WANG Jiuliang 王久良
2011. China. 72 min. Digibeta. English subtitles.

With a population of about 20 million, the growing city of Beijing produces 30,000 tons of waste each day. Photographer/filmmaker Wang Jiuliang traveled around the city and visited 460 legal and illegal landfills from 2008 to 2010 to document the collection of garbage and excrement, the environmental calamity and the life cycles around these landfills, which include scavengers building a precarious livelihood, green spaces forming on top of waste, and livestock being fed trash. An informative and alarming portrait of urban ecology, the film has earned keen Chinese media coverage and the attention of government officials.

Watch an interview with the filmmaker about this film.

WANG Jiuliang was born in Anqiu, Shandong Province in 1976. He is a graduate of the Cinema-Television School at Communication University of China. Wang is also a photographer. Beijing Besieged by Waste accompanies a larger photography project.


The Visions of a New China film series is supported in part by a grant from the Open Society Foundations. Additional support is provided by the Center on U.S.-China Relations and New York State Council on the Arts.

Cost: 
$7 members; $9 students/seniors; $11 nonmembers (Series discount available)
Phone Number: 
(212) 288-6400