10
Dec/21

REVOLUTION OF OUR TIMES: A FILM BY HONGKONGERS

10
Dec/21

Kiwi Chow’s Revolution of Our Times goes behind the scenes of Hong Kong protest

REVOLUTION OF OUR TIMES (Kiwi Chow, 2021)
Stuart Cinema
79 West St., Brooklyn
Opens Friday, December 10
www.stuartcinema.com

Kiwi Chow’s Revolution of Our Times is a fearless, unrelenting, unapologetic documentary that takes viewers into the maelstrom of Hongkongers’ impassioned fight for justice against the strong arm of Mainland China.

The January 25 Revolution in Egypt was harrowingly captured on film in Stefano Savona’s 2011 Tahrir: Liberation Square and Jehane Noujaim’s 2013 The Square. The 2014 Revolution of Dignity in Kyiv was memorably re-created in Mark and Marichka Marczyk’s immersive production Counting Sheep. In 2020, people around the world marched to protest the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis. And on January 6, 2021, Americans were glued to their screens as violent insurrectionists stormed the US Capitol. Chow takes the documenting of public protest to a new level in his film, opening December 10 at Stuart Cinema in Brooklyn.

In 1997, the transfer of sovereignty over Hong Kong passed from the British to China, but twenty years later, Hongkongers still hadn’t received the self-rule they had been promised. In 2019, they began marching against the Fugitive Offenders and Mutual Legal Assistance in Criminal Matters Legislation (Amendment) Bill, which called for extradition to Mainland China, giving legal authority to Beijing over Hong Kong citizens. A grassroots campaign soon turned into two million protesters taking to the streets, marching for freedom.

Chow puts viewers right in the middle of the ferocious action, following seven teams as they organize resistance against the heavily armed police amid brutal beatings, rubber and real bullets, tear gas, armored vehicles, and water cannons blasting liquid allegedly infused with a toxic blue substance. Told in such chapters as “The Beginning of the End,” “The United Front,” “Powerlessness,” “One Body,” and “The End of the Beginning,” the 150-minute film features remarkable on-the-ground footage combined with news reports and interviews with some of those on the front lines, including fourteen-year-old student Conscience, sixteen-year-old V Boy, twenty-year-old social work student Snake, twenty-three-year-old Sentinel Station coordinators Logic and Marx, twenty-seven-year-old salesperson Runner, voluntary first aider Morning, twenty-five-year-old administrative executive Mom, thirty-two-year-old business manager Dad, and others, their faces obscured to hide their identities. Chow was unable to locate some subjects for new interviews, as they had disappeared. “Everyone is a nobody. Nobody is everyone,” twenty-two-year-old parent-cars coordinator Nobody says.

Providing perspective are social worker Jackie Chen, Causeway Bay Bookstore founder Lam Wing-kee, legal scholar and Occupy Central leader Benny Tai, and heroic reporter Gwyneth Ho, who bravely broadcast what was happening live.

Evoking the 2014 Umbrella Revolution in Hong Kong, many of the protesters carry umbrellas as both shield and statement; they wear hardhats, gas masks, goggles, and, in some cases, bulletproof vests. As protesters start dying — Chow shows a few being dropped from buildings and one getting shot point blank in the chest — the resistance arms itself with Molotov cocktails while pushing the concept “Be Water” to slip away from the police and change strategy on the fly.

The fight for freedom continues as Hongkongers battle Mainland China

Calling out, “Liberate Hong Kong! Revolution of Our Times!” the protesters are organized into such groups as the Valiants, the Shield Men, the Smoke Controllers, the Map Team, and the Driving Team, incorporating gaming techniques while communicating via the Telegram messaging app. They challenge LegCo chief executive Carrie Lam and university presidents, who they see as loyal to Beijing. “I don’t want this to become the next 6/4 Tiananmen Square!” a woman yells at police in riot gear. Seventy-three-year-old farmer Uncle Chan becomes a savior, risking his life as a guardian of the children.

Chow (Ten Years: Self Immolator, A Complicated Story, Beyond the Dream) keeps coming back to one young man who in many ways is the prime example of how peaceful protest can quickly turn into something else at the hands of the police and a totalitarian regime. “I never thought I would get shot,” he says over footage of protesters being dragged through the burning streets and being fired at. “I got shot above my eye the first time. I was lucky; I was most scared of not being able to walk out of there. Can’t go back to the front line. Actually, I did these things because I wanted to tell the government that Hongkongers will not be silenced because of money or oppression. I will not let anyone rob me of my freedom. I will not let anyone take away my freedom of thought. I will not let anyone take away my free will.”

Watching Revolution of Our Times is a brutal experience that underlines the fear the world has of Xi Jinping’s China, as no nation helps the protesters. They are left in an impossible situation, especially as they are barricaded inside Poly U for a final, chilling confrontation. The score is unnecessarily sentimental and the ending is overly zealous, but the words and images tell an unforgettable story that, in 2021, is not improving, not in Hong Kong and not anywhere else. But as current affairs commentator Lee Yee says about the revolution, “There is no turning back.” And as several activists assert, despite all the setbacks, the movement is far from over.