Review | Winter Chants movie review: Hong Kong village struggles to stage once-in-a-decade festival in Tsang Tsui-shan’s follow-up to 2014’s Flowing Stories
- Filmmaker Tsang Tsui-shan set out to show preparations for once-a-decade Taoist festivities in the Hong Kong village of her birth. Then the pandemic intervened
- With emigrants from the village unable to return from overseas to take part, Winter Chants becomes a melancholic reflection on the meaning of home and family
3/5 stars
Throughout her career, Hong Kong film director Tsang Tsui-shan has repeatedly returned to her home village of Ho Chung, in Sai Kung in the New Territories. It is a testament to her sensitivity as both a storyteller and a long-time resident there that she has found fresh ways of reminiscing each time she has shot in the area.
While not strictly a prerequisite to watching Winter Chants, viewers are recommended to also seek out Tsang’s 2014 documentary feature Flowing Stories to learn more about her continued efforts to shed light on the rural village’s evolving population.
Not only did the earlier film offer an in-depth look at the Taoist rituals of the village’s Tai Ping Ching Chiu festivities, which have been held once every 10 years for more than three centuries, but it also doubled as a bittersweet account of diasporic lives, as a large number of Ho Chung villagers have migrated abroad in past decades to make a living.
Winter Chants may have begun as a logical follow-up to Flowing Stories, which documented the festival’s 2011 staging and gave voice to many of the villagers visiting from abroad (mostly Europe), but the complexion of Tsang’s latest effort was changed dramatically by the Covid-19 outbreak.
The film’s early scenes see the village chief and elders meet in 2019 to discuss preparations for the festivities; its main interview subjects are a Filipino domestic helper due to return to her own country, and the twin adult sons of the village’s temple attendant who are intent on promoting Sai Kung’s traditions through a self-funded local newspaper.