Youth (Spring) (2023) Poster

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8/10
A 3-hour humane observation of the youth working class
chenp-5470818 February 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Firstly, I applaud Chinese filmmakers being able to create some genuine tough documentaries that are likely going to get controversy. Creating stories about the harshness and realities in China are not easy to make and it's quite brave for those who create these kinds of documentaries.

A 3 hour and a half documentary about China sweatshop labors and the working class sounds repetitive by it's length but Chinese filmmaker Wang Bing manages to create a profound, emotional, and moving story about young Chinese working class textile workers working and living during harsh conditions.

Bing approach on the subject matter is quite immersing as we observe the daily lives and routines of the young textile workers in China. Observing the hardships they encounter and some of the harsh realities on the economy which Bing is able to capture really well. Workers living in a poor conditions, bosses being pretty rude and all, yet, with all the toughness, the workers still smile and live with joy. You feel a sense of humanity, sadness, and emotion on each of the young textile workers which Bing does a great job on capturing the realism.

The sound designs are pretty good. The uses of music is appropriate to the tone and setting. Each of the participants that are being shown, spoken, and observed are interesting and you feel a good genuine connection between them. For the 3-hour long runtime, the experience rarely feels slow because the connection of seeing these workers are genuine and made me feel emotionally connected with them. While there are some moments that do feel repetitive, especially towards near the third act, I still found myself engaging with this documentary.

Overall, Wang Bing strikes bravely with another great documentary.
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8/10
Youth in Happiness Street
pedramparagomi22 April 2024
The representation of private interests ... abolishes all natural and spiritual distinctions by enthroning in their stead the immoral, irrational and soulless abstraction of a particular material object and a particular consciousness which is slavishly subordinated to this object."

Marx, On the Thefts of Wood, in Rheinische Zeitung (1842)

This movie is not an easy watch but a necessary one if you wish to understand the perils of unbalanced economic growth.

Youth (Spring) is a 220-minute mammoth documentary filmed between 2014 and 2019. Separate substories show various workshops in Zhili City, China, the center of the textile industry. You see immigrant youth coming from nearby rural areas searching for jobs in these workshops under poor and unhygienic conditions. The dorms where these laborers work are dingy, rather dark, and depressingly dilapidated. The location is ironically named Happiness Street.

In the first story, we see a couple of lovers (19-20 years of age) having fun and joking about the speed of sewing the clothes and showboating their skill sets in an innocent childish way. Immediately after the intro, you're thrown into the real business which takes place downstairs (some similar structure in all the workshops: the boss's office is downstairs). The mother of the girl is negotiating time off for the abortion of her unwanted grandchild (the child of the jubilant girl upstairs). The boss's objection is business-oriented. Money-oriented. Religious values, Pro-life, and other philosophical/ideological concerns are distant and irrelevant in this material-oriented discourse. This is the heart of the textile industry in the aphotic heart of the Marxist world. They want the order to be prepared ASAP and they cannot offer the luxury of a day off.

The other story depicts a verbal argument between two young men (around 18 years old), The angry boy tries to attack with a scissor only to be stopped by the interference of ladies particularly a mother figure in the workshop, cutting his hand during the process.

In one story, we have a protest from a group of workers as they express their discontent over their salary to the "bosses" downstairs. Here a couple in their 50s are in charge. The gentleman undermines the protestors and threatens the workers to be fired and replaced easily. Considering the mechanical nature of the job, one can hardly argue on that point. This is another sequence that implies how much violence is hidden behind the rudimentaries of Happiness Street!

Even rare off hours in the movie do not change the gloomy mood. In one of the scenes, we see young siblings in a dark internet cafe discussing and you see the exhausted girl fall asleep in the cafe.

Each story segues into another without a link except for identical environments across workshops. There is no sustained narrative as the director probably intended to provide collages of various substories.

Youth is about a world reduced to paper bills, soulless transactions, and undignified souls walking their way through trash-strewn alleys (as a side note, you see abundant use of plastic in the environment!). This is a real picture of an industry with a revenue of 330 billion dollars per year. However, in Happiness Street, the youth are slavishly subordinated to objects and to nondescript bosses who ruthlessly upbraid them. Marx did predict this but not for a Communist-ruled terrain!
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