logo
‘Resurrection' Brings Bi Gan Back to Cannes With a ‘Movie Monster' That Showcases a Century of Cinema: ‘A Celebration of Life on This Earth' (EXCLUSIVE)

‘Resurrection' Brings Bi Gan Back to Cannes With a ‘Movie Monster' That Showcases a Century of Cinema: ‘A Celebration of Life on This Earth' (EXCLUSIVE)

Yahoo20-05-2025
Chinese auteur Bi Gan is back at Cannes with competition title 'Resurrection,' a six-part fever dream where movie monsters roam and dreams are extinct.
'I wanted to break down the spirit world into six elements,' Bi tells Variety, describing how 'Resurrection' unleashes a 'movie monster' that showcases a century of cinema history. These six elements — the five senses (sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch) and the mind — provide the framework for the film's labyrinthine chapters. The film is his first feature since the landmark 3D experiment 'Long Day's Journey Into Night' stunned festivals in 2018.
More from Variety
Films Boutique Delivers 'The President's Cake' to Multiple Territories After Cannes Premiere (EXCLUSIVE)
Scarlett Johansson's Directorial Debut 'Eleanor the Great' Lands 5-Minute Cannes Ovation as She Praises Star June Squibb as 'Truly Inspiring'
'Eleanor the Great' Review: Scarlett Johansson's Directorial Debut Is an Unconvincing Crowd-Pleaser, With June Squibb Doing Brash Shtick
In 'Resurrection,' starring Jackson Yee, Shu Qi, Mark Chao, Li Gengxi, Huang Jue and Chen Yongzhong, humanity has lost the ability to dream, with only one creature still entranced by fading illusions of the dreamworld. When a woman with the rare power to perceive these illusions appears, she chooses to enter the monster's dreams, determined to uncover hidden truths within.
Bi burst onto the international film scene with his 2015 debut 'Kaili Blues,' which won best emerging director at Locarno and established his reputation for dreamy, poetic cinema featuring long takes.
'Screens are getting smaller and smaller, and I really want to bring back, or at least re-educate the audience to understand the old feeling of watching cinema again,' Bi explains. 'When you watch the first story, it's set in the 1900s — it's almost like a prequel, and it's shot in a way that respects that type of cinema.'
Particularly notable is the film's nod to German expressionism, with the director using a 'movie monster' character to showcase different historical periods of cinema. 'The sixth story is closest to a modern movie as possible,' Bi notes. 'One of the actors is actually a very old actress who shot films back in the day. Having her in the most modern section allows the story to be a cycle of sorts, because it reminds you back to the beginning of the celebration of cinema.'
This structural approach represents a dramatic evolution from 'Long Day's Journey Into Night,' which premiered in Un Certain Regard at Cannes and became an arthouse sensation with its audacious second half — an unbroken 59-minute sequence shot in 3D, requiring audience members to put on 3D glasses midway through the screening. That technical achievement, coupled with the film's hypnotic narrative about memory and lost love, cemented Bi's status as a major voice in contemporary cinema.
When asked about the thematic core of 'Resurrection,' Bi says, 'As a director, everybody comes with their own version of their personal life. This film really does represent a level of my life and my energy, and the interaction of people in my environment. Even though it celebrates 100 years of cinema, it is also a celebration of life on this earth for me, and the energy that people have within each other, within a community, within the space that they are all in.'
The film's Chinese title, 'Kuang Ye Shi Dai' (translating roughly to 'wild era' or 'savage age'), differs from its English title — a pattern in Bi's filmography. 'All of my films have had different meanings in the Chinese version versus the English one. I've always had that habit. But when you watch the film, it all makes sense at the end,' the director explains.
Working with his cast required different approaches. For veteran actor Shu Qi, Bi found her intuition made direction fluid: 'Shu Qi has an extremely high ability to go with the flow and a strong sense of expression. When I would talk to her, I might say, 'This scene is like dancing,' and she understands that thought process without having it spelled out — she's very intuitive.'
For younger star Jackson Yee, who 'has this energy and spirit,' Bi took a more specific approach. 'I would talk to him about feelings and movies, and be a little bit more specific about how things would play out. I would give him my thoughts, and he would take those notes and perform.'
As the film premieres in Cannes' main competition — marking Bi's first appearance in the festival's top tier — he acknowledges potential challenges for global audiences. 'Because audiences don't understand my internal world and don't live in the areas I exist in, there will be a difference, a distance between their understanding of the film and my experience with it,' he says. 'But what I want them to experience is the beauty of the film and the experience of sitting in a cinema watching it. Everybody that goes to watch my films, they are almost like the movie monster in the film — we are all part of the same ecosystem that I'm bringing through this movie.'
Despite the seven-year gap since his last feature, Bi confirms new projects are already taking shape. 'I feel like I've rested enough during these seven years. Now that this film is out, I will be preparing something within the next year or so,' he reveals. 'I had an idea of what the topic will be while editing this movie, but I won't tell you — the seed of it exists, and I'm going to spend some time to develop it.'
The director adds: 'Every time I make a new film, I make a mandate: 'The next one will be simpler.' The approach to this film was supposed to be simple — a six-part movie — and then the more I shot, the more complicated it got. I'm promising myself, or trying to promise myself, that this next film is going to be simpler to make.'
'Resurrection' is produced by Dangmai Films (Shanghai) Co., Ltd. and Shanghai Huace Film Co., Ltd., in association with France's CG Cinema. Les Films du Losange is handling international sales.
Best of Variety
New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week
Emmy Predictions: Talk/Scripted Variety Series - The Variety Categories Are Still a Mess; Netflix, Dropout, and 'Hot Ones' Stir Up Buzz
Oscars Predictions 2026: 'Sinners' Becomes Early Contender Ahead of Cannes Film Festival
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Review: Spy thriller ‘World Pacific' turns wartime intrigue into farce, folly and adventure
Review: Spy thriller ‘World Pacific' turns wartime intrigue into farce, folly and adventure

San Francisco Chronicle​

time41 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Review: Spy thriller ‘World Pacific' turns wartime intrigue into farce, folly and adventure

No one is to be trusted in the fantastic, fanciful and often extremely funny novel, 'World Pacific,' from San Francisco writer Peter Mann. Much like Mann's debut novel, 'The Torqued Man,' this second, equally farcical novel, revolves around real-world events that touch, at least tangentially, on World War II. But this time, the setting, to which the novel's title 'World Pacific' refers, leads several dubious and unreliable characters toward the 1940 World's Fair on Treasure Island. One of these characters, and perhaps the most dubious of them all, is Richard 'Dicky' Halifax, a self-proclaimed author-adventurer, very much in the spirit of the real-life Richard Halliburton, who disappeared in 1939 in the same manner as Dicky does in the first few pages of this novel, while on an ill-prepared sailing journey from Hong Kong to San Francisco on a Chinese junk. The excursion is, in part, funded by a subscription service for young readers. In Dicky's case this subscription service would be 'The Dicky Halifax Junior Adventurers Club,' a series of letters that not only weaves in many an inappropriate reference to Dicky's crotch, but also operates as Dicky's central voice within the novel. Written in a folksy devil-may-care style, these letters, presented as chapters within 'World Pacific,' highlight Dicky's escape from many a tight spot. Or as Dicky writes in an early chapter, leading to his current predicament of being lost at sea: 'Dear boys, This is where the story starts to get hairy. Of all the close scrapes I've had, all the times I've blundered into a hornets' nest or was caught taking pictures of military installations on Gibraltar or got dragged to a pretty lady's bed only to find I was flaccid as a gym sock, this one took the cake.' The writing, particularly in the Junior Adventurers Club chapters, feels wonderfully inventive, often playing with clichés of the period and then elevating them through Dicky's individual voice and upbeat, foolish optimism. But Dicky is certainly not alone in this novel. While the connection to a talented émigré painter of Jewish descent, Hildegard 'Hilde' Rauch, feels at first tenuous, it soon becomes clear from a letter addressed to Hilde from her comatose brother that the now-lost-at-sea and presumed dead Dicky, might just be the key to understanding his current state. Or, as the suicide note from her brother so eloquently puts it, 'I just can't bear to live in a world without Dick.' Besides what becomes a sizable number of euphemisms and allusions (one, by sheer absurdity, that kept me laughing for a good five minutes), there is a plot to this novel, and a very twisty one at that. For, even as Hilde searches for answers and Dicky stumbles from one madcap adventure to the next, another character — Simon Faulk, a British intelligence officer on the hunt for Nazi spies and who also harbors a serious grudge against author-adventurer Dicky Halifax — takes the stage. All of which confirms that, along with being a quixotic tale of adventure complete with truth-telling sidekicks and wild goose chases, 'World Pacific' is, like Mann's first novel, a spy thriller of ingenious quality.

Pop Mart shares surge 12% after CEO says mini Labubus could launch as soon as this week
Pop Mart shares surge 12% after CEO says mini Labubus could launch as soon as this week

New York Post

time2 hours ago

  • New York Post

Pop Mart shares surge 12% after CEO says mini Labubus could launch as soon as this week

Shares of Labubu maker Pop Mart surged nearly 12% Wednesday after the company announced it would soon launch mini versions of its wildly-popular dolls as early as this week. Pop Mart CEO Wang Ning said during an earnings call that the new mini Labubu monsters will be made to hang off phones. The stock, which trades on the Hong Kong exchange, soared 11.9% to close at $40.75 — the highest level since Pop Mart went public in 2020. 3 Pop Mart announced it would soon launch mini Labubu dolls. AP Previous new releases from Pop Mart have sold out in minutes, causing the website to crash. Wang, who founded the toymaker in 2010, said Pop Mart is on track to meet its revenue goal of 20 billion yuan, or $2.78 billion, and that $4.18 billion 'this year should also be quite easy.' While most of Pop Mart's revenue comes from China, it has seen rapid growth in the Americas region in the first half of this year – with revenue jumping 1,142% from the year before. 'I think for overseas markets we're still very positive, and we also believe there's still very broad space for growth,' Wang said. Pop Mart currently has about 40 stores in the US, and it plans to launch a phase of 'relatively rapid store openings' – with 10 more US shops to open by the end of this year. The Chinese toymaker said Tuesday that its profit soared nearly 400% in the first half of the year. 3 People line up for the opening of Germany's first shop for Labubu dolls. AP Shares in the company have jumped more than 200% so far this year, pushing the Beijing-based company's market cap to over $46 billion – dwarfing Mattel's $5.7 billion value. The Labubu craze has been partially fueled by Pop Mart's move to sell them in 'blind boxes' – so shoppers don't know the exact color of their Labubu until they open the package. Videos of these 'unboxings' have gone viral online, and celebrities like K-pop singer Lisa, Rihanna and even soccer legend David Beckham have jumped on the trend – dangling Labubus from their designer bags and car keys. Charlie Gasparino has his finger on the pulse of where business, politics and finance meet Sign up to receive On The Money by Charlie Gasparino in your inbox every Thursday. Thanks for signing up! Enter your email address Please provide a valid email address. By clicking above you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Never miss a story. Check out more newsletters The dolls have been sold out in stores around the world, and resales can fetch hundreds or even thousands of dollars on online marketplaces like eBay. That's created a market for knockoffs called 'Lafufus' – though US regulators issued an urgent warning Monday that the fakes 'break apart easily' and can 'pose a serious risk of choking and death to young children.' 3 Labubu dolls have been sold out in stores around the world. REUTERS The demand for Labubus helped Pop Mart post net profit of $636 million, a 396.5% spike compared to the same period in 2024 – handily beating estimates of a 350% rise over the entire year, the company said Tuesday. Revenue skyrocketed 204.4% to roughly $1.93 billion, far stronger than the 62% growth seen in the same period last year.

‘Dawson's Creek' Reunion: News, Cast, Premiere Date, Tickets
‘Dawson's Creek' Reunion: News, Cast, Premiere Date, Tickets

Cosmopolitan

time2 hours ago

  • Cosmopolitan

‘Dawson's Creek' Reunion: News, Cast, Premiere Date, Tickets

Forget about Katie Holmes and Joshua Jackson reuniting onscreen next year in Happy Hours—fans of Dawson's Creek are about to get an even bigger treat this fall! A Dawson's Creek reunion is officially happening in September, and we've got all the details. The news was confirmed after several cast members—including James Van Der Beek and Busy Phillips—posted a teaser image on Instagram. The teaser post features a polaroid of the core four cast—James, Katie Holmes, Joshua Jackson, and Michelle Williams—on an orange background with the quote, 'If we were truly meant to be, then we'll find a way back to each other.' Not long after James' original post, the reunion was officially confirmed, and it sounds like something true fans don't want to miss. Here's everything we know: The reunion event is doubling as a charity event to support F Cancer, as well as James himself, who was diagnosed with colorectal cancer last year. Taking place at the Richard Rogers Theater on Broadway, the 'Class Reunion' will be a live reading of the Dawson's Creek pilot, as directed by Jason Moore, who directed three episodes of the show back in the early aughts. The live reading will also be produced by Carl Ogawa, Maggie Brohn, series creator Kevin Williamson and writer Greg Berlanti, as well as Michelle Williams and her husband, Thomas Kail. 'We grew up in Capeside and that's a bond that will last a lifetime,' Michelle said in a statement, per Variety. 'We wanted to gather around our dear friend James and remind him that we are all here. We always have been and we always will be. And I know the fans of Dawson's Creek feel the same way.' James, Michelle, Katie, Joshua, and Busy are all set to attend and reprise their roles in the live reading. Meanwhile, Busy, Kerr Smith, and Meredith Monroe (all of whom did not appear in the pilot) will read various parts. The full cast list is as follows: Tickets to the live reading go on sale Friday, August 22, at 10 a.m. PT (that's 1 p.m. ET) on Broadway Direct. Buy tickets now

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store