Chinese director
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Written by
Amy Tikkanen
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Last Updated: •Article History
Quick Facts
- Born:
- November 14, 1950/51, Xi’an, Shaanxi province, China
- Notable Works:
- “Cliff Walkers”
- “Hero”
- “Ju Dou”
- “Not One Less”
- “One Second”
- “Raise the Red Lantern”
- “Red Sorghum”
- “Shadow”
- “The Flowers of War”
- “The Story of Qiu Ju”
- “To Live”
See all related content
Zhang Yimou (born November 14, 1950/51, Xi’an, Shaanxi province, China) is a Chinese director who, as a prominent member of China’s “Fifth Generation,” is known for his films that explore sexual repression and political oppression.
Zhang’s father, a former major in Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalist (Kuomintang) army, was blacklisted when communists took control of China in the late 1940s. During the Cultural Revolution the younger Zhang spent years in forced labour on a farm; he later worked in a factory. The Cultural Revolution ended in 1976, and two years later he entered the Beijing Film Academy. There Zhang studied with a group of aspiring filmmakers—notably Chen Kaige and Tian Zhuangzhuang—that became known as the Fifth Generation. Deeming modern Chinese movies unimaginative and of poor quality, they sought to make innovative films that often examined the country’s social issues and history.
(Read Martin Scorsese’s Britannica essay on film preservation.)
After graduating in 1982, Zhang worked as a cinematographer on such films as Yige he bage (1983; One and Eight), Huang tudi (1984; Yellow Earth), and Lao jing (1986; Old Well). He also acted in the latter film, for which he won the best actor award at the Tokyo International Film Festival. In 1987 Zhang directed his first film, Hong gaoliang (Red Sorghum). The critically acclaimed epic—which won the Golden Bear at the Berlin film festival—starred Gong Li as a woman sold into marriage. Gong subsequently appeared in a number of Zhang’s films, including Ju Dou (1990), a drama about a woman in a loveless marriage who has an affair. Although banned in China, the film was an international success, and it became the first Chinese movie to be nominated for an Academy Award for best foreign film. Several of Zhang’s subsequent movies also ran afoul of Chinese censors, including Da hong denglong gaogao gua (1991; Raise the Red Lantern). The drama, which focused on the tense and ultimately fatal competition between four wives for the favour of their elderly husband, received an Oscar nomination.
In Qiu Ju da guansi (1992; The Story of Qiu Ju), Zhang eschewed the stunning cinematography and ornate settings of his earlier works for a gritty contemporary drama centring on a young woman who seeks justice after a village elder attacks her husband. The rise of communism and its impact on a family were examined in Huozhe (1994; To Live). Huozhe received the Grand Jury Prize at the Cannes film festival, but Chinese authorities refused to let Zhang attend the ceremony. He later directed the comedy You hua haohao shuo (1997; Keep Cool) and Yige dou bu neng shao (1999; Not One Less). The latter movie, centring on a school in a poor village, won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival. In 1999 Zhang also released the acclaimed Wode fuqin muqin (The Road Home), a romantic drama in which a son recounts his parents’ courtship.
In the early 21st century Zhang’s focus turned to martial arts dramas. Yingxiong (2002; Hero) was nominated for an Oscar for best foreign-language film, and it became the highest-grossing film in China. His subsequent action films included Shimian mai fu (2004; House of Flying Daggers) and Man cheng jin dai huangjinjia (2006; Curse of the Golden Flower). Zhang shifted direction again with the offbeat comic thriller San qiang pai an jing qi (2009; A Woman, a Gun and a Noodle Shop), a remake of the Coen brothers’ Blood Simple set in the Chinese desert.
In the historical drama Jin ling shi san chai (2011; The Flowers of War), he told the story of an American mortician (played by Christian Bale) who shelters a group of convent students and prostitutes during the Nanjing Massacre. Gui lai (2014; Coming Home) featured Gong as a woman whose marriage is destroyed when her husband is imprisoned during the Cultural Revolution. Zhang later codirected Wang chao de nu ren: Yang Guifei (2015; Lady of the Dynasty), about the tragic love affair between concubine Yang Guifei and Emperor Xuanzong, and then helmed the English-language thriller The Great Wall (2016). Ying (2018; Shadow) is an action drama inspired by China’s Three Kingdoms. Zhang’s subsequent movies included Yi miao zhong (2020; One Second) and Cliff Walkers (2021).
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As his work addressed less controversial subjects, Zhang often received the support of the Chinese government. In 2008 he directed the opening ceremony of the Beijing Summer Olympic Games.
Amy Tikkanen