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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Entertainment
Wendy Ide

Return to Dust review – paean to the simple life

Wu Renlin and Hai-Qing in Return to Dust
‘Tender bond’: Wu Renlin and Hai-Qing in Return to Dust. Photograph: Qizi Films Limited

It’s an arranged marriage of convenience – other people’s convenience. Browbeaten Cao (Hai-Qing) is offloaded by her brother on to Ma (Wu Renlin), the humblest of peasants, with little more than a donkey to his name. But against all expectations, a tender bond develops between them. Together, they eke out a life governed by the rhythms of the natural world, finding in their marriage a solicitude and comfort that had been denied them both until now. It’s a gorgeous, quietly affecting film that finds an unassuming beauty in this simple life in rural China, but which doesn’t shy away from the extreme hardships faced by the very poorest. A sleeper hit domestically, it reaches UK and Irish audiences having recently been unceremoniously pulled from Chinese streaming services, a victim, it is suggested, of a tightening official control over unflattering depictions of Chinese life.

Watch a trailer for Return to Dust.
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