The New York Times by A.O. Scott
The movie is an affecting group portrait and also a complex and subtle piece of literary criticism.
✭ ✭ ✭ ✭ Read critic reviews
China · 2020
1h 52m
Director Jia Zhangke
Starring Huifang Duan, Liang Hong, Pingwa Jia, Hua Yu
Genre Documentary
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Filmmaker Jia Zhangke creates an insightful portrait of four influential Chinese authors. Featuring extensive interviews with the three living authors, as well as those who know them, this dense documentary provides greater understanding of the forces that shaped great writers and of the way Chinese history has affected individuals.
The New York Times by A.O. Scott
The movie is an affecting group portrait and also a complex and subtle piece of literary criticism.
Slant Magazine by Chris Barsanti
Jia Zhang-ke’s film is a quietly reflective, intermittently rambling rumination on an explosively momentous period in Chinese history.
The Hollywood Reporter by Deborah Young
It’s the opposite of sensational; quiet, dignified and ruminative, it gets far closer to real Chinese people than a TV-style travelogue, though its many references to events in modern Chinese history will probably lose the casual viewer.
If you’re not too conversant with the regions or works under consideration, the viewer has a choice of laboring to connect the dots unassisted, or just kicking back and letting the people and their recollections and philosophical reflections wash over you, like the sea of the movie’s title.
The result, though intermittently stirring and often luminously shot, represents something of a chore for all but the most ardent Jia completists — and even some of them may be left adrift by the literary scope of a film that does surprisingly little to contextualize its subjects for viewers unfamiliar with their work.
The A.V. Club by Ignatiy Vishnevetsky
Across the extended, handsomely shot sit-down interviews (with Ma’s daughter and the three other writers), what emerges is a fragmentary oral history of Chinese rural life across several transformative decades of the 20th century: family stories, tragedies, remembered slogans, the particulars of trying to grow crops in alkaline soil or coming of age as the son of a declared “counterrevolutionary.”
Los Angeles Times by Justin Chang
The rhythms are uneven, the patterns of meaning often elusive. But they coalesce into a moving glimpse of lives lived and artistic legacies forged in the shadow — and sometimes the harsh, glaring light — of momentous historical change.
If Swimming Out Till the Sea Turns Blue and its intimate tapestry of peasant fortitude and artistic endeavor won’t be as immediately resonant to audiences outside of China as his expansive masterpieces “A Touch of Sin” or “Still Life” are, it’s still a valuable document.
The Film Stage by Rory O'Connor
Jia’s earnest approach has always been endearing and Swimming Out sees it in full flight.
Meditative and meandering, this handsomely shot but unfocused picture might present something of a challenge to all but the most dedicated students of Chinese cultural history.
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