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Review | Cannes 2023: Youth (Spring) movie review – vivid documentary about young factory workers in China by filmmaker Wang Bing

  • Wang Bing’s documentary Youth (Spring) follows young factory workers in a collection of clothes factories in a town in China’s Zhejiang province
  • Drawn from 2,600 hours of footage filmed over 5 years, the film offers an immersive, affecting overview of their exuberant lives amid poor working conditions

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A still from “Youth (Spring)“, a documentary  about young clothing factory workers in China, directed by Wang Bing, which premiered in competition at the Cannes Film Festival on May 18.

4/5 stars

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“This place is hell. Everybody bullies me. There isn’t a single moment of peace.”

So says a garment worker in Youth (Spring), Chinese filmmaker Wang Bing’s documentary set in a collection of children’s clothing factories in a town in China’s Zhejiang province.

The comment is hardly surprising, given the many reports throughout the years about the inhumane working conditions in sweatshops in China. But that line is delivered in full jest here, with the young man talking happily about how his older female colleagues make constant passes at him.

Trailer de Youth (Spring) — Jeunesse (Printemps) — 青春 subtitulado en inglés (HD)
The three-hour-plus Youth (Spring), which premiered in competition at the Cannes Film Festival on May 18, is full of such merriment.
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Despite their seemingly dismal existence, the young labourers crack jokes and listen to loud music, make out with their colleagues during time off, and have food fights in their dormitories.

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