The New York Times by A.O. Scott
Perhaps the world doesn't need another picture on disaffected youth, but Pleasures is about more than alienation.
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China, Japan, Korea · 2002
1h 53m
Director Jia Zhangke
Starring Wei Wei Zhao, Qiong Wu, Zhao Tao, Qing Feng
Genre Comedy, Drama
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Three disaffected youths live in Datong in 2001, part of the new "Birth Control" generation. Fed on a steady diet of popular culture, both Western and Chinese, the characters represent a new breed in the People's Republic of China, one detached from reality through the screen of media and the internet.
The New York Times by A.O. Scott
Perhaps the world doesn't need another picture on disaffected youth, but Pleasures is about more than alienation.
San Francisco Chronicle by C.W. Nevius
The story goes nowhere...We don't understand the motivation of the characters.
As lethargic as the characters it portrays, the film requires greater staying power than many audiences will possess.
Christian Science Monitor by David Sterritt
This sequel to Jia's excellent 1997 drama "Xiao Wu" is less original and absorbing than its predecessor, and less visually impressive than "Platform," his 2000 look at Chinese sociopolitical change.
New York Daily News by Elizabeth Weitzman
There are several small, startling moments of insight hidden amid the long, slow stretches of listlessness. But the balance is slightly off. We could have used a little more pleasure to get us through his grim adolescent unknown.
Unknown Pleasures suggests a coolly formalist reinvention of neorealism. The film is both distanced and immediate -- a fiction with the force of documentary.
There's a telling disjunction between the dismal lives of Jia's characters and the optimism of China's officially sunny advance into the 21st century, and their helplessness often becomes a pathetic pantomime.
Much like his overrated 2000 opus "Platform," Unknown Pleasures spends more energy fussing over the backdrop than on the poor souls languishing in the fore, who have little to do but wander aimlessly and symbolically as life passes them by.
Portland Oregonian by Shawn Levy
The film drags and lingers and goes more or less nowhere, imitating its protagonists' lives so exactly that you want to give them both a good smack.
A stunning study of ennui.
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