Synopsis
Beijing, early 1970s. While adults are consumed by the Cultural Revolution, army compound teenagers run wild. Jiang Wen directorial debut, based on Wang Shuo novella, starring 16-year-old Xia Yu who became the youngest Venice Best Actor winner.
Overview
In the Heat of the Sun is a 1994 coming-of-age drama written and directed by Jiang Wen, adapted from Wang Shuo novella Animal Ferocity. Starring a then-unknown 16-year-old Xia Yu alongside Ning Jing and Geng Le, the film captures the restless energy of teenagers growing up in a Beijing military compound during the Cultural Revolution.
The film was Jiang Wen directorial debut and immediately established him as one of China most important filmmakers. It won the Volpi Cup for Best Actor at the 51st Venice International Film Festival (making Xia Yu the youngest recipient in the festival history) and swept the 33rd Golden Horse Awards with four wins including Best Picture and Best Director.
Plot Summary
Beijing, early 1970s. The Cultural Revolution is in full swing, but for the teenagers of the military compound, it means only one thing: freedom. With schools closed and adults occupied with political campaigns, Ma Xiaojun (Xia Yu) and his friends have the run of the city.
Ma Xiaojun has a peculiar hobby: he has mastered the art of lock-picking and enjoys sneaking into strangers apartments. One day, he discovers a photograph of a beautiful girl and becomes instantly infatuated. When he finally meets the girl, Milan (Ning Jing), adolescent desire overwhelms him completely.
But Ma Xiaojun pursuit of Milan is clumsy and impulsive, while his charismatic friend Liu Yiku (Geng Le) seems to win her attention effortlessly. As the boys fight, race bicycles, climb chimneys, and skate on frozen lakes, the film becomes an intoxicating blend of nostalgia, humor, and longing.
Yet the narrator himself does not trust his own memories. Ma Xiaojun repeatedly interrupts his own story to admit that his recollections may be unreliable. This meta-narrative layer transforms simple nostalgia into a profound meditation on memory, truth, and the stories we tell ourselves.
Cast
| Actor | Role | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Xia Yu | Ma Xiaojun | Lock-picking teenager, the unreliable narrator |
| Ning Jing | Milan | The girl whose photograph haunts Ma Xiaojun |
| Geng Le | Liu Yiku | Ma Xiaojun charismatic rival |
| Tao Hong | Yu Beilei | A girl from the compound |
| Shang Nan | Yang Gao | One of Ma Xiaojun gang |
Behind the Scenes
The film was shot by acclaimed cinematographer Gu Changwei, whose warm, sun-drenched imagery perfectly captures the golden haze of adolescent memory.
The casting of Xia Yu is itself a legendary story. Jiang Wen auditioned hundreds of teenagers across Beijing before discovering Xia Yu, a completely untrained middle school student. At just 16, Xia Yu delivered one of the most remarkable debut performances in cinema history and became the youngest-ever Best Actor winner at the Venice Film Festival.
Awards
| Award | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|
| 51st Venice Film Festival | Golden Lion | Nominated |
| 51st Venice Film Festival | Best Actor (Xia Yu) | Won |
| 33rd Golden Horse Awards | Best Feature Film | Won |
| 33rd Golden Horse Awards | Best Director (Jiang Wen) | Won |
| 33rd Golden Horse Awards | Best Leading Actor (Xia Yu) | Won |
| 33rd Golden Horse Awards | Best Adapted Screenplay | Won |
| Singapore International Film Festival | Best Director | Won |
Cultural Impact
The film is the only Cultural Revolution-themed film from the 1990s approved for release in mainland China. Yet Jiang Wen genius was in treating the political upheaval as mere background, focusing entirely on the universal experiences of adolescence. The title is deeply ironic: during one of China darkest periods, these unsupervised teenagers experienced literally days bright with sunshine.
References
- Douban: https://movie.douban.com/subject/1291875/
- IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0111786/
- Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_the_Heat_of_the_Sun_(film)
Stills & Gallery
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