63
JCC 7 (1) pp. 63–79 Intellect Limited 2013
Journal of Chinese Cinemas
Volume 7 Number 1
© 2013 Intellect Ltd Article. English language. doi: 10.1386/jcc.7.1.63_1
Keywords
Zhao Liang
Petition
Paper Airplane
Chinese documentary
documentary ethics
documentary form
xianchang
dan edwards
Monash University
Petitions, addictions and
dire situations: The ethics of
personal interaction in Zhao
Liang’s Paper Airplane and
Petition
absTracT
Over the past decade, the predominant style of Chinese documentaries produced
outside China’s official production channels has shifted from a Wiseman-inspired
observational mode to an interpersonal approach that often lays bare the interac-
tions between film-maker and documentary subject. The work of director Zhao Liang
reflects this trend, but Zhao’s films are also distinguished by an ethically reflec-
tive approach that questions and problematizes the film-maker’s involvement in his
on-screen subjects’ lives. This article will elucidate how Zhao’s reflective style plays
out through a close reading of his first completed feature documentary, Zhi Feiji/
Paper Airplane (2001), and his best-known work, Shangfang/Petition (2009). It
will be argued that in Petition, Zhao parlays his ethically reflective style into an
examination of the impact that China’s comprised legal system has on the broader
ethics of social relations.