영화 정보

Tie Xi Qu: West of the Tracks
Toronto Real to Reel
Family/Child
True Story
Human Rights/Labor/Social
- CountryChina
- Production Year2003
- Running Time558min
- FormatDCP
- ColorColor
Program Note
Here begins the myth of Wang Bing, the symbolic face of 21st century Asian documentary cinema. He captures the lives of Chinese laborers and their families, as they are swept up, pushed around, and cast aside by the turbulent industrial reforms that have unfolded rapidly at the turn of the new century. This is the moment Wang’s eternal subject, capturing portraits of the Chinese people, makes its debut. At the end of the 20th century, he took a small DV camera to the Tiexi district in Shenyang and spent two years with laborers. Most factories had already shut down by then. The laborers, who once numbered a million, had gradually left as the factories closed, and the last remaining workers in the district are who Wang Bing documents. Consisting of three parts titled ‘Rust,’ ‘Remnants,’ and ‘Rails,’ Tie Xi Qu: West of the Tracks runs 558 minutes. Now it is time to witness on screen why the film demands such a length. This is the monumental debut film by Wang Bing, who changed the course of Asian documentary cinema. (KANG Sowon)
*Detailed Screening Schedule
Part 1-1: 11:30 ~ 13:36 (Intermission 1: 15 min)
Part 1-2: 13:51 ~ 15:50 (Intermission 2: 60 min)
Part 2: 16:50 ~ 19:49 (Intermission 3: 15 min)
Part 3: 20:04 ~ 22:18
*Detailed Screening Schedule
Part 1-1: 11:30 ~ 13:36 (Intermission 1: 15 min)
Part 1-2: 13:51 ~ 15:50 (Intermission 2: 60 min)
Part 2: 16:50 ~ 19:49 (Intermission 3: 15 min)
Part 3: 20:04 ~ 22:18
Schedule
- CODE
- DATE
- TIME
- THEATER
code188
date09-20
time11:30
theaterCGV Centum City 3
1515세관람가
KE
Director

WANG Bing
Wang Bing studied cinematography at the Beijing Film Academy and began making films in 1999. He garnered international attention with his monumental debut, Tie Xi Qu: West of the Tracks (2003), which has a runtime of over nine hours. Since then, as one of China′s leading documentarians, his work has been featured at prestigious international film festivals, and a complete retrospective of his films was held at the Centre Pompidou. His major works include ‘Til Madness Do Us Part (2013) and Dead Souls (2018). He won the Orizzonti Award at the Venice Film Festival for Three Sisters (2012) and the Golden Leopard at the Locarno Film Festival for Mrs. Fang (2017). Recently, he directed the Zhili garment worker trilogy—Youth (Spring) (2023), Youth (Homecoming) (2024), and Youth (Hard Times) (2024)—which were invited to the competition sections of the Cannes Film Festival, Locarno Film Festival, and Venice Film Festival, respectively.
Credit
- DirectorWANG Bing
- CinematographyBing WANG
Photo