Trap Street
Description
A slow-building drama set in contemporary China, Trap Street has a perfect modern-noir protagonist in Li Qiuming (Lu Yulai), a naïve survey engineer who views the world through his gadgets: cell phone, GPS watch, video games. When he’s not working his day job, he’s got a side gig installing hidden cameras in bars, health spas and other businesses interested in keeping close tabs on customers. Qiuming’s happy-go-lucky life — he lives in a bachelor pad with like-minded bros, visiting his old-fashioned parents when he has the time — takes a turn when he spots comely Guan Lifen (He Wenchao) through the lens of his surveyor’s equipment. She works in a plain building on a shadowy lane that stymies the map crew by not yielding any data — it’s a “trap street,” per the lingo of Qiumung’s mapmaking coworker, who shrugs it off: “Some places just won’t register in the system.” To Qiumung’s delight, Lifen agrees to go out with him, and he’s soon so smitten he doesn’t realize there’s another trap of sorts down that mysterious alley. First-time writer-director Vivian Qu is clearly interested in examining what it’s like to be a 21st-century young adult — with access to the Internet and other technological conveniences — within China’s surveillance state. Using just a handful of characters and a plot that hinges on a chance encounter and a seemingly tiny blunder, Trap Street unearths a hidden world of government control lurking just under the surface, like a road that doesn’t appear on any maps, but exists just the same. –Cheryl Eddy
Chinese producer Vivian Qu (Diao Yinan’s Night Train) makes her writing-directing debut with Trap Street. In interviews, she has rejected the idea of calling the film a thriller: “I probably did the opposite of what Hitchcock did. [He] would show you a bomb under the table, and show the diners talking as if nothing is happening, but the audience will be freaking out. I want people to really look into something that appears very mundane, and then little by little discover something.”
Trailer
//player.vimeo.com/video/90065158?autoplay=1Film Details
Language Mandarin
Original Language Title Shuiyin jie
Year 2013
Runtime 94
Country China
Director Vivian Qu
Producer Sean Chen
Writer Vivian Qu
Editor Yang Hongyu
Cinematographer Tian Li, Matthieu Laclau
Cast Lu Yulai, He Wenchao, Hou Yong, Zhao Xiaofei
Print Source 22 Hours Films/ 22hoursfilms@gmail.com