The Greatest Documentary You’ve Never Heard Of: An Introduction to Wang Bing’s Nine-Hour Tie Xi Qu

The Chi­nese film­mak­er Wang Bing’s ‘Til Mad­ness Do Us Part, a doc­u­men­tary about a men­tal insti­tu­tion in Yun­nan, runs three hours and 48 min­utes. Beau­ty Lives in Free­dom, on the life of impris­oned artist Gao Ertai, is five and a half hours long; Dead Souls, on the sur­vivors of a hard-labor camp in the Gobi Desert, eight hours and fif­teen min­utes. Even if you know noth­ing else of his work, you may get the impres­sion that Wang isn’t the most shame­less­ly com­mer­cial of film­mak­ers. The extreme dura­tion of some of his movies sure­ly make them a hard sell, as do his grim choic­es of sub­ject mat­ter. But if you want to under­stand the trans­for­ma­tion of mod­ern Chi­na, you could hard­ly find a rich­er body of cin­e­mat­ic work.

In the video essay above, YouTu­ber Ken Dai extols the virtues of Wang’s first film: Tie Xi Qu: West of the Tracks, whose more than nine hours of footage depict the last years of the tit­u­lar indus­tri­al dis­trict of Shenyang. Wang draws them from the more than 300 hours he shot in the years between 1999 and 2001, by which time a shift in eco­nom­ic pol­i­cy had made redun­dant what had once been not just a con­cen­tra­tion of state-owned enter­pris­es, but “a mon­u­ment to a vision of the future.”

Tie Xi employed count­less many in the foundries and fac­to­ries that made pos­si­ble the dra­mat­ic ear­ly decades of Chi­na’s eco­nom­ic rise, but for its work­ers and their fam­i­lies alike, it had also become a stage on which gen­er­a­tions of life played out.

Wang bears wit­ness to that stage’s dis­man­tle­ment. In the film’s first part, Dai says, “we watch the work­ers show up, day after day, to a sys­tem that has already decid­ed they’re no longer nec­es­sary.” The sec­ond turns to “the fam­i­lies, and par­tic­u­lar­ly the teenagers”; the third “fol­lows a freight rail­way that once con­nect­ed all of it, and two men, a son and a father, who live and scav­enge for scrap met­als.” They and the many oth­er remain­ing Tie Xi denizens who pass before Wang’s cam­era speak for them­selves. At no point does the film incor­po­rate nar­ra­tion, inter­views, or even non-diegetic music. (There is, how­ev­er, an impromp­tu per­for­mance by a nude gui­tar-play­ing man in a bar­racks.) In its refusal to use its peo­ple as metaphor­i­cal fig­ures or polit­i­cal props, Tie Xi Qu stands as an exam­ple of “direct cin­e­ma” at its most direct — except, per­haps, for Wang’s lat­er cloth­ing-fac­to­ry doc­u­men­tary, the apt­ly titled 15 Hours.

Relat­ed Con­tent:

285 Free Doc­u­men­taries Online

50 Must-See Doc­u­men­taries, Select­ed by 10 Influ­en­tial Doc­u­men­tary Film­mak­ers

A Chi­nese Painter Spe­cial­iz­ing in Copy­ing Van Gogh Paint­ings Trav­els to Ams­ter­dam & Sees Van Gogh’s Mas­ter­pieces for the First Time

The God­dess: A Clas­sic from the Gold­en Age of Chi­nese Cin­e­ma, Star­ring the Silent Film Icon Ruan Lingyu (1934)

China’s 8,000 Ter­ra­cot­ta War­riors: An Ani­mat­ed & Inter­ac­tive Intro­duc­tion to a Great Archae­o­log­i­cal Dis­cov­ery

Watch the Film That Invent­ed Cin­e­ma: Work­ers Leav­ing the Lumière Fac­to­ry in Lyon (1895)

Based in Seoul, Col­in Marshall writes and broad­casts on cities, lan­guage, and cul­ture. He’s the author of the newslet­ter Books on Cities as well as the books 한국 요약 금지 (No Sum­ma­riz­ing Korea) and Kore­an Newtro. Fol­low him on the social net­work for­mer­ly known as Twit­ter at @colinmarshall.


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