

Similarly, her leads, Yulai Lu and Wenchao He, are experienced actors who deliver measured, sincere performances. A highly engaged audience offered diverse questions and insights, and expressed several responses to the story not intended by Qu. The Q&A session following the screening spoke to the success of Qu's light hand.
The art of the film lies in Qu's choice to only subtly imply a point of view, allowing the performances and the story to unfold in a way that is open to interpretation.
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Director Vivian Qu clearly maintains an open-ended approach to the story, free of pat answers or a formulaic resolution to the climactic events. He spends his time after hours gaming online with his pals, creates his own digital mapping projects through his smartphone and does odd jobs installing video surveillance gear for sketchy clients.
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The protagonist played by Yulai Lu is a surveyor and a digital citizen of his particular patch of the global village. The casual disregard shown for pervasive surveillance in Trap Street is both ironic and deliberately characteristic of life in our times. When personal lives accidentally and suddenly cross a certain line to provoke official concern, a seemingly free person is confined to a fish bowl of scrutiny and coercion.

The characters in Trap Street are very believable yet begin as fish in an aquarium, oblivious to their immersion in a contemporary surveillance society. Trap Street by director Vivian Qu portrays ordinary experiences - chance meetings, infatuations, and love - in a familiar yet eerie setting riddled with both overt and implied surveillance. I think it could do with more exploration of the relationship between the characters, and more answers would be welcome. What I found a bit disappointing is the very ending- you would need to judge for yourself whether it offers an explanation that would satisfy you.
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I would say that the film as a whole is great, a combination of Kafka's Trial and Orwell' 1984 set in contemporary China, but with a universal message, as the director said, it is not an anti-Chinese government film, but a social commentary on how reliant we are on new technologies, and relationships between people in the era dominate by computers, Internet, where privacy is almost non-existent. There are some charming scenes, like when the man and his friend give the woman a lift, and Joan Baez's Donna Donna plays in the background, simple but beautiful. She clearly hides things away, but the main character does not seem to notice how uneasy she becomes in certain situations. The woman appears and disappears, cannot be contacted for days only to pop out of nowhere for a date. A young man falls for the accidentally met woman. I have been very lucky not only to see this at the festival this week, but also to have an opportunity to participate in the Q&A session with the director who shed some, but unfortunately, not enough light on some of the film's mysteries.
