Past screening

City, Essay, Film: The Concrete Revolution

Directed by: Xialou Guo
Runtime: 1hr 1min Year: 2004

Details

Directed by: Xialou Guo
Runtime: 1hr 1min Year: 2004
Country: United Kingdom
Last Screened: Tue 9th Jul 2019

A collection of works contemplating the social impact of architectural transformation, led by Xiaolu Guo’s brave and intelligent film on the moral and human cost of creating a ‘New China’ in The Concrete Revolution.

Part of the UCL Urban Laboratory series City, Essay, Film this final screening presents a collection of works contemplating the social impact of architectural transformation, led by Xiaolu Guo’s brave and intelligent film on the moral and human cost of creating a ‘New China’ in The Concrete Revolution.

The screening is introduced by Kyran Joughin (University of the Arts London), a lecturer and researcher in film and time-based media, concentrating on the interaction between film, public art and architecture.

The films in this programme include:

The Concrete Revolution (dir. Xialou Guo, 2004, 61 mins)
The Concrete Revolution examines the tremendous moral and human cost of creating a ‘New China’ for the 2008 Olympics.

The Visitor (dir. Sharone Lifschitz, 2019, 29 mins)
Pritzker Prize-winning architect Wang Shu features in this filmic exploration of a museum in Ningbo, China, constructed from the debris of 29 villages eradicated to make way for a new district.

Construction Lines (dir. Max Colson, 2017, 8 mins)
A playful, animated film on the proposed development of an ‘iceberg’ home in a prosperous area of London.