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Mask of a face

A Chinese animated film that highlights societal bias is winning praise in festival circuits, Xu Fan reports.

By Xu Fan | CHINA DAILY | Updated: 2020-08-14 07:02

Award-winning Chinese animation, The Town, revolves around the negative impact of bias and stereotyping. [Photo provided to China Daily]

Unfolding with a bird's-eye view, the beginning scene-a continuous long shot-takes the audience to an isolated town nestled in lush mountains.

The town is reminiscent of southern China's traditional architectural style. It has cobblestone alleyways and houses with black tiles and white walls.

With conflicts between the protagonist siblings-a restrained sister and her rebellious younger brother-the fantastical story unfolds around a strange social norm in the town.

That is, locals strongly believe they'll live better lives after undergoing a surgery called xiurong ("face-polishing").

Anyone who gets the approval to undertake the surgery will be taken to a special room, where the person puts on a wooden mask and gets injected in the face.

After the surgery, the person will have a new "face" in accordance with the appearance of the chosen mask.

The masks vary in appearance and provide different functions such as making a person look like "elite".

While the brother strongly resists the unwritten rule and tries to escape the town, the sister, who works as a mask sculptor in the town's top xiurong institution, is more compliant. She seeks approval to receive the surgery-her greatest dream for improving their family's economic situation.

"The draft idea of The Town was first shaped in early 2016, when our animation team was brainstorming a story about a person who resists being labeled but is forced to behave like the others," says Gu.

From then and until the end of 2019, the animation team, which had expanded from 10 to more than 50 members, revised the script many times, with the theme finally revolving around the negative impact of bias and stereotyping.

With over 230 shots set in around 10 locations, the film depicts nearly 70 characters and displays more than 100 props, a large amount for a short animated work.

"When we decided to produce the film, we didn't think much about commercial returns. We were attracted to the idea of creating an unlikely story," says Gu.

The major creators hope that the movie will help the audience to reflect more about the contradictions between individuality and social conformity, he adds.

The film is scheduled to be released on Chinese streaming sites later this year.

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