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Review: Be a Mother (2011)

Be a Mother

母语

China, 2011, colour, 2.35:1, 91 mins.

Director: Yu Zhong 俞钟.

Rating: 7/10.

Un-soupy chamber drama of surrogate motherhood, with standout playing by actress Qin Lan.

STORY

Beijing, summer 2007. Recently returned from the UK, after six months away, research biologist Zhang Qing (Fang Zhongxin) again discusses with his wife, celebrity TV reporter Fang Yun (Wang Pei), the idea of having a child by a surrogate mother. Fang Yun has already miscarried three times and is afraid of trying again, as well as having no time in her busy career. But like her husband, she feels the pressure from her parents to have a child, so agrees to Zhang Qing’s idea. From several applicants they settle on Li Yan (Qin Lan), a young woman from out of town who came to Beijing to try to become an actress but has ended up in menial jobs and needs the money to send to her father. The three draw up a private contract, Li Yan moves into the couple’s lavish house, and she soon becomes pregnant following artifical insemination. Some six months later, all is going smoothly: with Fang Yun constantly travelling for her job, Zhang Qing, who is working at home on a research proposal, looks after Li Yan, who does light housework to occupy her time. Zhang Qing’s parents (Wu Ma, Sun Guitian) come by, delighted at the progress. Feeling a little cut out, Fang Yun tries to re-assert her role as the child’s “mother” but is rarely around long enough. Early the following year, the child is born – which is when the problems start.

REVIEW

Singer-TV actress Qin Lan 秦岚, who was one of the best things about The Last Supper 王的盛宴 (2012) by Lu Chuan 陆川, is the main reason to watch the much more modest Be a Mother 母语, shot and released prior to the splashier costume drama. Billed as China’s first movie on surrogate motherhood, and apparently based on a true story, it’s a surprisingly good, chamber-like undertaking – entirely set in a single house – that’s all the better for not following expectations and veering off into melodrama. Simply plotted, with a yuppie couple hiring a young surrogate mother and installing her in their lavish home on a year’s contract, the film sticks resolutely to its subject of what acually makes a mother without becoming drily procedural or concocting any sexual triangle.

It’s a movie driven entirely by its performances and script, and by the unforced direction of Yu Zhong 俞钟, who made his name a decade ago with the “identity” dramas, Roots and Branches 我的兄弟姐妹 (2001) and Far from Home 我的美丽乡愁 (2002), but has since worked mostly in TV drama. Aided by precise, well-lit photography by veteran Hong Kong d.p. Ao Zhijun 敖志君 [Peter Ngor], Yu never makes the film feel constrained by its single setting and also never makes it feel like a de facto theatre play, either. Art direction by Qu Haibo 曲海波 makes the house look spacious and discreetly moneyed, without being ostentatious, with plenty to attract the eye between the actors. Quiet scoring by Liu Sijun 刘思军 (Dam Street 红颜, 2005) is another plus.

Playing her real age here, rather than much older as the ruthless empress in Supper, Qin, 31, who was also memorable as the wife in Lu’s City of Life and Death 南京!南京! (2009), starts discreetly as the dutiful surrogate and builds her character through small layerings as the story proceeds. It’s an intelligent, completely un-vampy performance that defies expectations and has a quiet power by the end. In her first big-screen role, TV actress Wang Pei 汪裴 (General Ye Ting 叶挺将军, 2009) is less nuanced as the career-driven wife but believable as the career-driven TV reporter, while Hong Kong’s Fang Zhongxin 方中信 [Alex Fong Chung-sun], though not ideally cast as the scientist husband caught in a dry marriage, is okay.

The script by producer Wang Haiping 王海平, who wrote the very different anti-Japanese war drama Hushed Roar 咆哮无声 (2012, also starring Wang Pei), doesn’t get sidetracked by the mechanics of finding surrogate mothers, apart from briefly showing it done on the internet. Instead, it focuses on the biological and emotional aspects of motherhood, mirrored in the film’s Chinese title which puns on the word “mother tongue”, a key point in the second half.

CREDITS

Presented by Shenzhen Media Vision Goldring Film & TV Investment (CN), Beijing Huihua Dongfang Culture Investment (CN). Produced by Beijing Longhai Starlight Media (CN).

Script: Wang Haiping. Photography: Ao Zhijun [Peter Ngor]. Editing: Jiang Hua. Music: Liu Sijun. Art direction: Qu Haibo. Sound: Wang Yu.

Cast: Fang Zhongxin [Alex Fong Chung-sun] (Zhang Qing), Qin Lan (Li Yan), Wang Pei (Fang Yun), Fang Zichun (Aunti Li, nanny), Chen Siyang (Zhang Qiang), Wu Ma (Zhang Qing’s father), Zhou Xiaoou (Zhang Qing’s brother-in-law), Sun Guitian (Zhang Qing’s mother), Dan Zili, Tian Miaomiao.

Premiere: China Image Film Festival, London, Sep 2011.

Release: China, 17 Jul 2012.

(Review originally published on Film Business Asia, 21 Jan 2013.)