
Whether it is in movies or literature, Chinese mothers tend to be portrayed as selfless,caring, devoted, and hardworking. Perhaps to please China’s censors, who are notoriously keen to safeguard “family values,”mainstream creators tend to extol great maternal love, beautiful mother-child relationships, and the value of filial piety in their works.
But mothers can also be angry,resentful, and hostile, and this is the reality that director and screenwriter Yang Lina explores inSpring Tide.Released on May 17 on video platform iQiyi due to the Covid-19 pandemic,the acclaimed film explores the multigenerational mother-daughter conflicts between journalist Guo Jianbo (Hao Lei), her widowed mother Ji Minglan (Jin Yanling), and Guo’s daughter Wanting (Qu Junxi), a fourthgrader.
The tagline on the film’s poster reads,“Your relationship with your mother determines your relationship with the world.” In this sense, Guo must have been fighting against the world for every minute of her life. A single mother, Guo lives in an old apartment together with her daughter and her own mother, Ji Minglan, a retired journalist who became a community cadre. In public, Guo acts as a strongminded and capable professional, but once at home, she becomes a passive and resentful daughter suffering from a lifetime of her mother’s verbal abuse.
Though Guo almost never talks back to Ji directly, her silences showcase a continuous passive rebellion toward her mother and the audience. Actress Hao Lei contributes her best performance in several scenes where she doesn’t have any lines: Guo, full of hate, putting out a cigarette on a dumpling wrapper after being criticized for smoking;grasping a cactus with her bare hands,neurotically twisting as blood seeps between her fingers while her mother swears at her continually; and, when her mother sets her up with a man,sending vulgar messages to scare him away.
Ironically, mother Ji also has two faces: among neighbors and friends,she is polite, helpful, and well respected; but in front of her daughter,she becomes emotional, acerbic, and cruel. When she hurts her daughter again and again, it’s clear that she knows what she is doing. “I have never seen a person as shameless as you!” she tells Guo in one scene—and means it.
It takes courage to portray hatred and cruelty between family members,and it’s even harder to outline a probable reason. Ji’s hostility toward her daughter is complicated and paradoxical: Ji doesn’t accept Guo as her family, and complains about her daughter living in her apartment,because she believes a woman at Guo’s age is supposed to be married.Concurrently, there is Ji’s troubled relationship with her own mother when she was young and her resentment over an unhappy marriage, which resulted in the daughter who inherited the surname of her husband, the man Ji believes had destroyed her life.
“Every family has a pair of invisible hands, shaping everyone’s personality.It’s very hard to change,” says actress Hao in an interview with Douban,arguing that the family in the film is a snapshot of Chinese society. It’s hard to say whether the tragic circle would be broken. Guo, to some extent, fails to become a good mother as well—her sensible daughter, with whom she has a close relationship most of the time,resents Guo’s frequent absences due to work deep down, and prefers the moody grandmother.

The character of Guo’s father is the most interesting of the movie, though he never appears on screen. Just like in the famous Japanese movieRashomon,the characters have conflicting memories about him. According to Ji, her husband is a pervert who was arrested for exhibitionism and sexual assault, but Guo remembers him as a gentle father whose wife reported him to the police and taught their daughter to hate him. The movie (spoiler alert)never reveals whose testimony is true,and, unlike most family films, has no“hug and release” resolution. Instead,a seven-minute monologue by Guo indicates that she may be trying to let go of the past, but could also signify that nothing will change.
It isn’t a flawless film:Spring Tideis rated 7.2 out of 10 on Douban, which is above average but unspectacular.There are critics who take issue with the different accents used by three actors playing members of the same family, and others who find the storyline too unfocused to follow.Fans, though, have rallied to the film’s defense: “If you don’t understand the movie, it only means that you are lucky enough to have a happy family.”
- SUN JIAHUI (孫佳慧)
It’s so quiet. When you’re quiet, the world is also quiet. Let’s just stay quietly like this for a while. If you wake up, you’ll start swearing at me with the dirtiest, most vicious words you can find. You always say I’ll get my comeuppance. What kind of mother says that to her daughter? What is it that you think I deserve?
Hǎo ānjìng a. Nǐ ānjìng le zhège shìjiè jiù ānjìng le. Jiù ràng wǒmen zhèyàng ānjìng de dāi
yíhuìr ba. Rúguǒ nǐ xǐnglái yídìng huì mà wǒ,yòng zuì āngzāng èdú de yǔyán lái zhòumà wǒ. Nǐ zǒngshi shuō wǒ huì zāo bàoying,
nǎyǒu māma zhèyàng duì zìjǐ nǚ'ér shuō de?Nǐ qīdài wǒ huì zāodào shénme yàng de
bàoying?
好安靜啊。你安靜了這個世界就安靜了。就讓我們這樣安靜地待一會兒
吧。如果你醒來一定會罵我,用最骯臟惡毒的語言來咒罵我。你總是說我會遭報應,哪有媽媽這樣對自己女兒說的?你期待我會遭到什么樣的報應?