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本帖最后由 共惜年月 于 2016-5-18 12:51 編輯
2015年末上映的《老炮兒》在國內引起了巨大反響。對這樣一部有關于上一代人江湖道義的影片,,兩代人的感想也各有千秋,。本文作者和父母在“家庭日”里一起去觀看了這部電影。
作為上一輩的父母對影片感同身受,,在這部影片里看到的是曾經(jīng)以道義為重的價值觀在如今社會遭受的沖擊,,而身為90后的作者在這部影片中可以思考的是在金本位的現(xiàn)代社會中值得我們傳承的傳統(tǒng)價值觀是什么。
正如六爺?shù)膬鹤铀�,,現(xiàn)代社會這個江湖光靠“混”而沒有一技之長是行不通的,,但全憑單打獨斗而拋棄全部的信義道德也同樣不可取。而這也是本片想要引起我們思考的地方——究竟是什么值得為之奮斗,。
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2016-5-18 12:49 上傳
By Leo Luo
翁詩易 注
A trip to the movies with my parents usually turns out two ways: I’m both shaking my head and groaning as my parents say they didn’t get the movie, or it’s the other way around. This time it was no different. I was home for the holidays and we decided to go watch a movie together. Gritting my teeth in preparation for a long car ride home with me trying to explain the plot of the movie to them, I agreed. After all, family time came few and far between as I continued through university, and will only become less and less frequent as I enter the working world. But that night my parents decided to watch the movie that was all the rage in China: Mr. Six. Two and a half hours later, I walked out of the movie theatre confused, and not just because of the heavy Beijing drawl that slurred together the Chinese words.
There was simply too much in the movie that I did not understand on a cultural and generational level. The car ride home, and many days afterwards, was filled with my parents and even my relatives explaining all the cultural and generation-specific references that were found in Mr. Six. And now, I think I’ve understood the movie, but not completely from the perspective that my parents and their generation see it.
The movie Mr. Six recounts the story of a former gang leader named Mr. Six who spends his days in Beijing wandering the hutongs behind the popular Hou Hai district. Although he has long since abandoned his days of mob fights against rival gangs, he still occasionally involves himself in spats between the police and his friends, or even sometimes performing good deeds for those in need of money, as dictated by his personal code of jianghu (honour among criminals). His tranquil life is turned upside down when his estranged son is kidnapped by a gang of young people who have nothing guiding their actions except money and pleasure. The movie illustrates the clash of generations between Mr.
Six and the rich young people, drawing particular emphasis on how the excess of money has spoiled the young generation into lacking any respect for either traditions or anyone outside their circle. Despite coming from a low social class and possessing a criminal background, Mr. Six and his former gang members (and later on, his son) were cast as the only characters who upheld the values of loyalty and honour found in old Beijing. The movie seemed to represent a pitiful call of nostalgia for a simpler time and simpler relationships between those called friends and family.
While my parents fell in love with the movie, I found that I drew grimmer conclusions. Speaking as a young person who still needs to worry about making a living, I agreed with Mr. Six’s son when he confronted his father over his lack of applicable skills. His son accused his father of being a thug, which only sent him to jail for his constant fighting, no matter who he was sticking up for. As my record of rejected job applications keep reminding me, loyalty and honour are not employable.
If students nowadays cannot find jobs even with advanced degrees, how can they have the time to always be there for their friends during moments of trouble? Although the movie portrays Mr. Six as the paragon of old world values despite his criminal background and low social class, I cannot fully endorse Mr. Six as a role model for me and my generation. While Mr. Six stays rooted in the past because it is the only thing he knows (and frankly, wants to know), young people should be seizing every opportunity they can to expand their horizons. Innovation must be at the forefront of our minds, from fields like science to literature to even politics. As both business and social connections weave the world together, we must spend our energy embracing the values of entrepreneurship and ambition in order to have the best chance of making a living.
However, the movie relays another important, but perhaps wishful message, regarding values that is also directed towards my generation. During the final scene of the movie, when Mr. Six stared down his foes at the frozen lake behind the Summer Palace with his sword in hand, it seemed like he was going to die alone. At that moment, dozens of cars swerved up to the lakeside and all of Mr. Six’s former gang members tumbled out, from the successful businessman dressed in designer brands to the limping veteran who eked out a living repairing bikes on the streets.
Each clutched some sort of weapon in hand as they gathered behind Mr. Six, shouting “Whoever makes an enemy of Mr. Six, makes an enemy of all of us!” The sight of these brothers uniting for their friend at his greatest time of need left me with a half-smile. On the one hand, I did not break into a full grin because moments like those are staples that movies live off of, but rarely happen in real life. It isn’t so easy to risk everything, from reputation to even physical injury, to help out a friend. But on the other hand, I appreciated that scene because of its call to reflection, especially for young people. It reminds us to ponder what is worth making money for.
While wealth makes life comfortable, it’s the friends and family who stay at our side that make life worth living. And those bonds are only kept alive through remaining loyal and approachable even when social statuses change or when one falls on hard times. In other words, I believe that spending money on grabbing a beer with someone I can call a brother far outweighs sipping the finest merlot in the world alone.
Watching Mr. Six also reminded me of a similar movie called Midnight in Paris, directed by Woody Allen and starring Owen Wilson. The movie told the story of an aspiring author named Gil who idolizes the era of the “Lost Generation” in Paris, and is magically transported back to those years each midnight. As I watched Gil converse face to face with his heroes like Earnest Hemingway and F.
Scott Fitzgerald, not to mention falling in love with a charismatic beauty, I was treated to a glimpse of the liveliness of that era that no textbook could capture. Although Gil eventually realised that he had to learn to live in the present, he had relished those visits to the 1920s where he could cure his nostalgia.
While both movies played with the theme of nostalgia for bygone eras, Midnight in Paris celebrates the past while Mr. Six laments its passing. Perhaps this message resonated the most with my parents and their generation because they grew up in Beijing during the 1970s and 1980s. For them, the character of Mr. Six was a symbol of the values that they were raised with. Concepts such as unquestionable loyalty to friends, respect for elders, and upholding traditions were second nature to them, and Mr. Six embodied all of these qualities. The contrast between Mr. Six and the kind of young people that his son was involved with only emphasized the loss of those values in this day and age. It was like watching their childhood hero thrashing to stay afloat against the floodwaters of modern society.
But I found that when boiled down to their cores, both Midnight in Paris and Mr. Six are two sides of the same coin. Both movies illuminate how the past represented pinnacles of beauty or righteousness, which can only be found in nostalgic memories that cannot fit in with the current generation. Yet from another point of view, perhaps that is the true worth of nostalgia: it shows me and my generation which values and traditions are worth holding on to, no matter how society changes or how much money we make. After all, it’s not enough just to live, we must hold onto what is worth living for.
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