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The Goddess (1934,
China) (aka Shen nu)
In director Wu Yonggang's (his debut film) silent melodrama
about social injustice and maternal sacrifice - a tragic tale about
the hard-times of a 1930s Shanghai, China prostitute (a "fallen
woman") - a single mother who was raising her son in the hellish
and foul city (in the midst of a civil war). [Note: Stanley Kwan's
biopic Center Stage (1991, HK) (aka The Actress, or Ruan Lingyu) was
the life story of Ruan Ling-Yu, portrayed by Maggie Cheung]:
- the heartbreaking story of the anguished, mistreated,
victimized, self-sacrificing, and disadvantaged main character:
The 'Goddess' (Ruan Ling-Yu), a single mother-streetwalker who
was trying to make a living on the neon-lit streets of Shanghai,
while loving and caring for her young son Shuiping
- her ethereal facial image, after a long night of prostituting
- a close-up of her looking upward - as if to implore God to help
her survive her ordeal of nightly hookups and the struggle to provide
for her child
- the despicable, easy-to-hate character of her pimp
The 'Boss' (Zhang Zhizhi), an exploitative, threatening, chubby-faced
gangster-hoodlum gambler who took most of her earnings, was abusive,
and forcibly made her his property: "Listen baby, you're gonna
find out soon who it is you're dealin' with. A little girl like you,
you'd never make it out there without me"
- the scene of the shunnings that she received from
neighbors, and from the 'respectable' parents of her son's (Li Keng)
classmates - who criticized both her son and herself for her moral
corruption; even her son asked: "Why do they always say I'm
not from their type of family?" - as she gently rocked him in
her arms
- the camera angles of her johns - either viewed by
only their feet, or in overhead shots
- renewed with hope, she was able to pay for her boy's
education (with a secret stash of money she kept behind a loose brick
in the wall), but there were increasing protests and the prejudiced
governing school board put pressure on the Principal to investigate;
when he learned of her "shameful" lifestyle, she explained
her pure motivation: "I used the money I earned selling my body
to support him in school. I want him to become a good person. Why
do you deny my child the opportunity to get a good education?"
- despite her pleas and the Principal's dissent before
the board ("You must understand the problem is not with her,
but with our society. She is a human being and has her human rights
- so does her son. Particularly her son...She's had no choice but
to throw herself on the mercy of the filthy streets...And it's all
for the sake of her son, for his future...We have a moral duty to
save him from this toxic environment"), the boy was expelled
and the Principal resigned in protest
- the downbeat conclusion - the 'Boss' had discovered
her secret stash of money in the wall (saved up for her son's education
and for her own independence) and immediately gambled it away; she
confronted and grabbed him, as he admitted that he had already spent
the money; she responded: "Then, we'll both die together" -
and when he struck her in the mouth and drew blood, in self-defense,
she grabbed a nearby bottle and smashed it over his head - and he
collapsed dead to the floor
The Goddess' Self-Defense
Murder of Her 'Boss'
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- after she fainted, there was a dissolve transition
to a courtroom - she was brought before a judge and sentenced to
twelve years in prison for murder; while shaking the bars of her
jail cell in disbelief about her uncertain future, the Principal
arrived and offered to adopt and educate her son - to give him
the life she had always wanted for him: "The court ruled that
your son should be sent to an orphanage. But I want you to know
that I'm going to adopt him and educate him personally"
- the final title card stated: "In the solitary
and quiet life of the prison, she finds a new peace in imagining
her child's bright future"; in the bittersweet ending, she envisioned
her son smiling happily down upon her
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Streetwalker "The Goddess" with Her Young Son
Looking Upward
With Her Son
With One of Her Johns (Feet Only)
Jailed and Sentenced to Twelve Years in Prison
The Principal's Offer to Take Care of Her Son
Envisioning Her Son
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