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Beijing: young men in packs, machismo, class divisions, violence, and indifference. Guei arrives from the country: toothbrushes, hotel foyers, and Qin, a rich neighbor in high heels, dazzle him. He gets a job as a messenger. The company issues him a bike, which he must pay for out of his wages. When it is stolen, Guei hunts for it. A student, Jian, has it; for him, it's the key to teen society - with his pals and with Xiao, a girl he fancies. Guei finds the bike and stubbornly tries to reclaim it in the face of great odds. But for Jian to lose the bike would mean humiliation. The two young men - and the peop...
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le around them - are swept up in the youths' desperation.
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De jonge Guo Liangui komt van het Chinese platteland naar de hoofdstad Beijing om er werk te zoeken. Hij vindt een baan als fietskoerier en krijgt een splinternieuwe fiets. Per afgeleverd pakje verdient hij 10 yuan (ongeveer één euro) en bovendien wordt de fiets na 60 ritten zijn eigendom. Het ziet er allemaal heel aanlokkelijk uit, maar het is veel moeilijker dan het lijkt. Beijing is een gigantische stad, vooral voor een jongen van het platteland. Het stratenpatroon is heel complex en er zijn enorm veel mensen met dezelfde naam. Als de fiets van Guo dan ook nog wordt gestolen, is het helemaal een ramp. Zijn wer...
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kgever eist dat hij de fiets terugvindt; anders wordt hij ontslagen. Maar Beijing telt miljoenen fietsen.
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Wang Xiaoshuai's moving, emotional BEIJING BICYCLE tells the story of a young country boy, Guei (Cui Lin), who comes to the big city determined to make it. He soon finds a job as a bike messenger in which he gets a small percentage of each delivery, working hard to build up enough credit to eventually own the bike for himself. As he grows closer to his goal, the bike is stolen and ultimately winds up in the hands of Jian (Li Bin), a poor city boy who sees the bike as his only way to make friends and impress the girl he loves. With both boys claiming the bike is theirs, a series of fights ensues over what is more ...
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than just a bike--it has become a symbol of success, power, and greed in a changing country.
Lin and Bin are excellent as the two boys battling over the bike; it is heartbreaking to watch Lin keep a tight hold of the bike even as Bin and his friends beat him senseless. Cinematographer Lui Jie depicts a very different China, one that is filled with dangerous, meandering alleys and frightening poverty. The film, almost devoid of color save for a young woman's red dress and shoes, is reminiscent of Vittori De Sica's BICYCLE THIEF and Peter Yates's BREAKING AWAY; the freedom the bicycle represents overwhelms both young boys as they risk their lives to hold on to it. The film won a Silver Berlin Bear for its honest, gritty, heartfelt depiction of a Beijing that is not often seen in the West.
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