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Kang Ruining

Emotional Crisis

    Can a life built on deceit ever be rebuilt

    RELEASE

    BUGET

    N/A

    LENGTH

    90 min

    Description

    The story follows a habitual liar whose endless deceptions finally exhaust his wife Liu Ting’s last shred of hope; she walks out and the marriage collapses. Convicted he can now “fly free like a little bird,” the freshly divorced man heads for a lakeside idyll with only a tent and his dog. The postcard-perfect solitude he imagined quickly reveals itself as emotional emptiness, forcing him to confront the hollowness beneath his charm and decide whether a life built on deceit can ever be rebuilt.

    Reviews

    PantaOz

    @PantaOz

    Zhang Rui’s lead performance is a ninety-minute masterclass in wooden self-pity: every line lands with the thud of a cold read, the same glazed puppy-eyes deployed whether he’s confessing betrayal or ordering take-out. His soon-to-be ex-wife shows more life in her exit than he manages in the entire film, and the handful of bit players appear to have been kidnapped from a mall food court and forced to recite dialogue at gunpoint. The script mistakes fortune-cookie clichés for soul-searching (“Freedom is just another cage…”) and recycles them until the words lose all meaning, while the plot drifts from tent to lake to convenience store without ever discovering why anyone should care.

    Kang Ruining, wearing the triple crown of producer, director and cinematographer, delivers visuals that slip in and out of focus like a drunk tourist’s phone reel, color-graded from mold-grey to accidental teal and back again. Scenes begin mid-gasp and end mid-thought, flashbacks crash into present-tense dog-food runs, and the big cathartic sunrise was plainly shot at high noon through a five-dollar filter. The result feels less like a feature than a 90-minute selfie-stick accident: an aimless, artless slog that leaves you rooting for the lake to swallow the camera—and the ego—whole.