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Nina Wu(灼人秘密)

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Taiwan · 2019
1h 42m
Director Midi Z
Starring Wu Ke-Xi, Vivian Sung, Hsia Yu-chiao, Ming-Shuai Shih
Genre Drama, Mystery

Nina Wu is a girl who leaves her small theater company in the country and moves to the big city to pursue her dream of becoming an actress. After a long struggle and a long wait, she lands herself a role as the heroine in a 70s espionage film, but with fame comes new hardships.

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70

Film Threat by Alex Saveliev

While his previous drama, The Road to Mandalay, showcased his keen eye for social realism, Nina Wu is suffused with visual poetry – all stark-reds and grainy yellows – and a dream-like (or nightmarish, depending on how you view it) atmosphere. It’s a portrait of a country experiencing significant sociopolitical changes. By focusing on its filmmaking industry, Z takes advantage of the opportunity to experiment visually, thematically, and narratively – at times, to the film’s detriment.

83

IndieWire by David Ehrlich

Here, the same genre tropes that are ordinarily primed for cheap thrills and big twists are bent towards the opposite effect, as the film blurs the line between reality and delusion in order to make audiences question a trauma so disorientingly awful that it might otherwise be easy to dismiss altogether — even for the people who suffer it first-hand.

80

Variety by Jessica Kiang

Nina Wu is a thrillingly complicated sort of corrective, living out the progressive ideal of giving the victim back her story, even when that story, told with lacerating self-criticism and a deep undercurrent of dismay, includes a great deal that falls far short of progressive ideals.

63

Movie Nation by Roger Moore

Director Midi Z and his muse (Ke-Xi Wu is in most of his films, including “The Road to Mandalay”) take us on an increasingly fraught and stylized trip down the rabbit hole of “big break” success and the guilt and emotional scars that linger from what Nina might have endured to get there.

80

Los Angeles Times by Sarah-Tai Black

Truth and delusion intermingle within this space, materializing not as spectacle or doubt, but rather as an embodied, if not literalized, study of the ways in which women attempt to intellectually and emotionally make sense of their experiences of exploitation.

50

The Hollywood Reporter by Todd McCarthy

Some will say that Nina Wu is a courageous work for exposing the abuse powerless young actresses face when trying to break into an acting career, while others will no doubt feel that, by what it shows, the movie remains part of the problem. As unevenly presented here, it’s a wobbly tightrope.

50

Screen Daily by Wendy Ide

Timely as it is, this is a film which doesn’t always treat its female characters with the respect that one might hope for, certainly given that it is intended to expose exploitation rather than add to it.

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