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I Am Not Madame Bovary(我不是潘金莲)

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China · 2016
2h 8m
Director Feng Xiaogang
Starring Fan Bingbing, Zhang Jiayi, Guo Tao, Dong Chengpeng
Genre Comedy, Drama

When Li’s husband divorces her, accusing her of having an affair, she petitions the Chinese legal system to clear her name. In this social issue-comedy based on the 2012 novel I DID NOT KILL MY HUSBAND, it’s the principled but poorly educated Li versus the inescapable bureaucracy of her nation.

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What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

60

The Hollywood Reporter by Deborah Young

The sarcasm of superstar director Feng Xiaogang reduces Chinese bureaucracy, the legal system and government inefficiency to ashes in I Am Not Madame Bovary, but risks doing the same for audiences in a caustic, overlong satire whose coy visual effects overpower the story and characters.

70

Variety by Dennis Harvey

Long, relatively low-key but always engaging, I Am Not Madame Bovary wears its expansive scale lightly.

50

The New York Times by Glenn Kenny

There’s some intriguing social commentary in the Chinese comedic melodrama I Am Not Madame Bovary.... But appreciating it, and the other points of interest in the movie, requires a perhaps unusual amount of patience, or even indulgence.

75

Washington Post by Mark Jenkins

Although it’s intended as a satire, director Feng Xiaogang’s movie has a literary tone, a leisurely pace and relatively few laugh-out-loud moments. It captures not only Lian’s frustration, but also the exasperation of the authorities who must deal with the demanding woman during her 11-year quest for justice.

70

Los Angeles Times by Noel Murray

The hyper-dramatic touches help disguise that this is essentially a film about paperwork. The rest of the weight is carried by Fan, who’s funny and heartbreaking. She’s a hero for our times: a stubborn woman, willing to inconvenience the powerful to get a fair hearing.

50

Movie Nation by Roger Moore

The acting is rarely broad and Fan Bingbing delivers a credible haplessness in Lian. The broader comedy translates well-enough.

50

The Seattle Times by Tom Keogh

The script by Liu Zhenyun becomes ponderous and redundant, kept on oxygen by its lead actress’s complex performance as a child-woman with enigmatic wisdom.

83

The Film Stage by Zhuo-Ning Su

An overlong mid-section stagnates after the novelty of the premise wears off, but a couple of plot twists late in the game raise the stakes again and Xiaogang Feng, with his signature dry humor and newfound creative juices, hits too many marks on this one for it to disappoint.

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