The Eleventh Child (Vietnamese: Nguol thùa) is a drama film, directed by Dai Sijie and released in 1998.[1] A coproduction of companies from Vietnam, France and Canada, the film stars Akihiro Nishida as Tang, a Vietnamese man who returns to his hometown upon learning that his brother is ill with leprosy. Community folklore holds when a family from the area gives birth to five sons and five daughters, they will gain the power to kill a large fish in the nearby lake whose flesh can cure the disease; Tang already has five sons and four daughters and his wife is pregnant once more, meaning that he may become the one who can fulfill the community's dreams.[1]

The Eleventh Child
FrenchTang le onzième
VietnameseNguol thùa
Directed byDai Sijie
Written byDai Sijie
Nadine Perront
Produced byClaude Kunetz
Marc Piton
Roger Frappier
StarringAkihiro Nishida
CinematographyGuy Dufaux
Edited byMarie Castro-Vasquez
Music byJean-Marie Sénia
Production
companies
Paris New York Productions
Max Films
La Sept Cinéma
Distributed byRézo Films
France Film
Release date
  • September 2, 1998 (1998-09-02) (MWFF)
Running time
91 minutes
CountriesCanada
France
Vietnam
LanguageVietnamese

Critical response edit

Godfrey Cheshire of Variety praised Dai's visual sense and Guy Dufaux's cinematography, but wrote that "the problem, from first till last, is all in the script, which gives no indication that its events connect meaningfully with anything in the real world. There’s no sense that this village and its beliefs reflect any actual culture, nor is there a hint that the tale’s action is meant to symbolize or comment on contemporary reality in Asia. Lacking both a concrete ethnography and imaginative resonance, pic plays out like an opaque and pointless history pageant, expertly choreographed but devoid of passion and purpose."[1]

Awards edit

Dufaux received a Jutra Award nomination for Best Cinematography at the 2nd Jutra Awards in 2000.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Godfrey Cheshire, "The Eleventh Child". Variety, September 28, 1998.
  2. ^ Odile Tremblay, "Pas de balayage en vue". Le Devoir, January 27, 2000.

External links edit