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Howard Schumann
03-16-2010, 03:39 PM
LAST TRAIN HOME

Directed by Lixin Fan, (2009), China, 85 minutes

While the problem of migrant workers exists all over the world, in China the problem is particularly acute. According to Chinese government statistics, the current number of migrant workers in China is estimated at 130 million, approximately 9% of the population. The migrant worker’s working and living conditions in the cities are precarious with most unskilled workers working ten to twelve hour days and having one or two days off a month without benefits, pensions, or health insurance.

Until recently the children of migrant workers were kept out of urban schools and high fees still prevent them from en¬tering schools, so most migrant workers leave their children at home in the countryside. They grow up there with grandparents or other relatives and grow estranged from their parents, of¬ten seeing them only once a year, usually during the Chinese New Year. Despite these many problems, the migrant workers continue to come to the cities, because for many staying in the villages is no longer an alternative.

Lixin Fan’s revealing documentary Last Train Home is not a film about economics but about humanity and the personal toll families of migrant workers must endure. Last Train Home is the first documentary for Fan, who worked as associate producer on the acclaimed film Up the Yangtze and as editor on To Live Is Better Than To Die, about AIDS in China. The film focuses on five members of the Zhang family whom the director met when touring a denim factory in Guangdong province, shooting 300 hours of footage over a period of several years as he became almost a member of the family.

Fan reveals that the Zhang’s left their home in the countryside sixteen years ago just after the birth of their daughter to work in the factories of Guangdong province, making cheap goods for the West and only return home once a year for a few days during New Year. Along with 140 mil¬lion other migrant workers, this is often the only occa¬sion in which they can spend time with their chil¬dren and par¬ents. The story is about the Zhang’s attempt to leave the city to journey to their countryside home while having to fight the inhuman crush of workers who crowd into Guangdong’s dirty railway station to secure tickets. It is not a pretty picture.

The trip covers more than 2,000 kilometers and it is an exhausting and stressful journey by train, bus, and ferry. When they finally arrive, they are able to spend only a few days with their son Yang (10) and daughter Qin (17), who have grown up under the care of their grandparents and who they hardly know. During the last ten years, Qin has become resentful at never seeing her parents, even though the economic necessity of the arrangement is self-evident. The parents’ only conversation is to tell the children to study hard but they show no interest in what they are studying or exploring with them their areas of weakness. In a rebellious frame of mind, Qin decides to leave school and go to work in a factory just like her parents, thinking that that is the path to freedom.

During one visit, adolescent acting out together with lack of parenting skills erupt into an ugly physical confrontation between father and daughter over her use of the “f” word, an altercation that could have easily been avoided if either one had shown some emotional maturity. "It was totally unexpected and just happened after this long train ride," Fan says. "I was actually in the next room changing a light bulb and heard a shout. It was a very tough moment because we were so emotionally attached by that point. But it reveals so much of the conflict in this family and how it's an inevitable result of this society and this time, and how this big nation is just dashing towards modernity."

Last Train Home was shown at the Guangzhou Documentary Film Festival last year and it was an emotional experience. The young audience, many of them students, loved the film. One boy said he couldn't stop crying during the screening — it was like seeing his own life on screen. His older sister, he said, had to give up school and go to work in the factory so he could continue studying. While the Zhang family shows much determination and resilience, their story has basically little upside to it. In exploring the dark side of the Chinese economic miracle, Last Train Home has plenty of tunnels along the journey but little light at their end.

GRADE: B+

Chris Knipp
03-17-2010, 04:26 PM
Hi, Howard. Have you seen my discussion+link thread for the Lincoln Center/MoMA New Directors/New Films series (as well as some of Film Comment Selects) -- where I have posted about a dozen reviews over the past couple weeks in the Festival Coverage section?

That discussion+link thread i (or begins)s HERE (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?2810-Film-Comments-Selects-And-New-Directors-New-Films-2010). Festival thread for FCS and ND/NF 2010 begins HERE (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?2808-Film-Comments-Selects-And-New-Directors-New-Films-2010).

I posted a review of Lixan Fan's Last Train Home there a week ago. Click on the title below and you'll see the review. Last Train Home will be showing at the Walter Reade Theater (FSLC) and at MoMA as part of ND/NF.

Showings are as follows:

Thu Apr 1: 6:15 (MoMA)
Sat Apr 3: 12:00 (FSLC)

Where did you see the film? It's not scheduled for a US theatrical release yet, so far as I know.

Lixin Fan: Last Train Home (2009)--ND/NF (http://www.filmleaf.net/showthread.php?2808-Film-Comments-Selects-And-New-Directors-New-Films-2010&p=24148#post24148)

Another documentary, and a vivid and well-photographed one by a young Chinese director who immigrated to Canada, about social upheaval in modern China. Fan focuses on the Zhangs, a small family torn apart by the parents' factory work in a big industrial city far from their farmland home, and the sullen resentment of their young son and teenage daughter over being abandoned for the duration of their youth. Fan also shows the horrific conditions of the Guangzhou railway station when some of the 120 million essential but abused and exploited migrant workers suffer borderline humanitarian disaster conditions to make their annual New Years trip home, the Zhangs among them.

Howard Schumann
03-17-2010, 05:13 PM
Yes Chris, I read all of your reviews and did see your review of Last Train Home. It is an excellent review of a well done film but one that is so downbeat that it doesn't leave one with many positive memories. As an insight into the problems faced by migrant workers in China, it accomplishes what it sets out to do but, as you say, I wish he had picked a family that showed a little more resilience and emotional maturity.

Howard Schumann
03-17-2010, 05:26 PM
I saw this film in Vancouver in a local art theater where it has played for a week.

Chris Knipp
03-17-2010, 05:32 PM
Indeed, we agree; as I mentioned, the river film Up the Yangze is less downbeat, and other films about Chinese population displacement like Jia's are more subtle. However the coverage of the station and the horrors of the migration trips home make this of interest.

I didn't know the film was now showing in theaters. That makes its ND/NF showing somewhat unnecessary.