1983. Dir: Chen Kunhou. Scr: Chu Tien-wen, Hou Hsiao-hsien.
"Zhu Tianwen came into the film industry as a result of publishing a prize-winning piece, “Growing Up” (Xiaobi de gushi, “The story of little Bi,” published in the United Daily News, 1982). Hou Hsiao-hsien and Chen Kunhou were interested in the story of Xiaobi and arranged to meet Zhu in a coffee shop. Thus began a rich creative partnership that continues to this day."
"However, within a sclerotic institution this took a certain amount of guile. To pass the studio’s conservative line of ideology, these assistants would prepare “creative” proposals that disguised the real intent of the films. For instance, Growing Up is about a boy who turns to juvenile delinquency and drives his mother to suicide. He fails to live up to her ambition for him to go to college, and goes to military school instead. Xiao Ye wrote this up as a pitch that promotes the military academy
as a place to straighten out wayward boys..."
"Take Chu Tienwen’s first screenplay, Growing Up, as an example. Zhu’s title of the source, “The Story of Little Bi,” suggests a strong biographical and autobiographical inclination. Here Zhu was interested in documenting the true life of an ordinary boy growing up in a small township with a stepfather old enough to be his grandfather. The boy is sensitive and energetic, but the fact that he was born a bastard and adopted as a stepson of a military man predestines his troubled childhood. As the title indicates, it is a “story,” the fictionalization of an ordinary life that makes it extraordinary. If Zhu were a regular biographer, she might have taken the precaution of observing the codes of biographical writing to keep her story objective, true to the life of her real-life subjects. But in the poetics of auto/biography, the story is written in the first-person point of view of a grown woman remembering her childhood. This textual device repeats itself in the film. On many occasions, the otherwise omniscient narration is accompanied by the voice-over of the neighbor girl, to inform the spectator of her own reflections on the troubled boy next door."
Growing Up, to the surprise of the filmmakers (including the scriptwriter herself), was a commercial success.
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