The Knockturnal
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • Music
  • Lifestyle
  • News
  • Videos
  • Covers
  • Merch
EntertainmentFilmThe Latest

Creative Confines and the Cinema of Space in Zhengfan Yang’s Stranger

by Robert Wickers May 15, 2025
by Robert Wickers May 15, 2025 0 comments
93

Non-spaces and the liminal at the fore of Zhengfan Yang’s Stranger.

Often shuttling between his native China and a newly established home base in Chicago, the director Zhengfan Yang found himself spending an inordinate amount of time within the sterile confines of hotel rooms and airport lounges in the wake of the COVID pandemic. The experience struck him as something both alienating yet universal – a poignant embodiment of our contemporary age and its relentless cultivation of anomie. Yang expounded on this revelation and its creative implications at a New Directors/New Films screening of his latest film, Stranger – a piece he considers to be the culmination of the manifold hours spent in the rootless ether of travel and its accompanying spaces. A work of great formal and thematic ambition, the KVIFF Grand Prix winner aims to portray China’s political, social, and economic reality with an oblique and deeply existential touch.

If we’re to allow ourselves the vulgar indulgence of comparison, many will likely note that Yang’s meditative gaze appeals to the likes of Akerman and Costa, with its measured immersion and long, unyielding takes. But where their visual signatures found poetic evocation in a gritty naturalism and fictive realism, Yang explores the uncanny texture of modernity through the hyper-real, and at times even the surreal. Spanning seven vignettes, Stranger commands these distinct tonal rhythms to combine personal ideas of space and time with the rugged, and sometimes subtle, injustices of modern China. A hotel worker seeks refuge in an empty room, two men become subjects of a police raid, a woman livestreams during the pandemic, and a street performer prepares to head to work. Often marked by an unalloyed simplicity, each story is imbued with a contemplative depth that feels at times rigorous and hard-won, at others empty and grasping. But Yang finds greatest form, unsurprisingly, where ambiguity and liminality run deep – deploying movement, space, and time to express most profoundly what his philosophical exhortations at other times cannot.

That the film chooses French anthropologist Marc Auge’s “non-places” as cinematic ground for these themes reveals a subtext that is totalizing yet somehow, against the backdrop of an offscreen reality, equally restrained. Sofia Coppola’s Lost in Translation brought popular attention to Auge’s anthropological work, mining “non-places” (a phenomenon of “supermodernity,” inorganic and self-contained in its relation to human social experience) for their romantic and emancipatory potential. More than twenty years on, as hyperglobalization continues apace in our post-COVID world, Yang’s apprehension of the liminal non-place feels more incisive in its clinical approach, a recombinatory exploration of Coppola’s melancholy punctuated by the solitary gut-punch of modernity. What was once considered charming, foreign eccentricity in Japan’s morass of glowing urban anonymity is now fundamentally familiar to contemporary China and Western cities alike, sans romantic valence. Stranger seems to grasp this shift and its foreboding implications in a way that will likely give it cultural and cinematic purchase for years if not decades to come. If anything is liberating in this re-examination of the urban “non-space,” it is decidedly Yang’s fastidious preoccupation with space and its natural rhythms. Four walls may suggest fetters, but for the Chinese director, they are the ultimate stage for the exploration of the human condition, offering a crystalline view of how we relate to the confines we inhabit. Here we find something transcendent, the beautiful storm of the human soul in stark relief, wending its way through breaths of motion like a ritual incantation.

KVIFFMoMANew Directors/New FilmsStrangerZhengfan Yang
0 comments 0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Robert Wickers

previous post
ZYRTEC® and Tyler McGillivary Launch the Ultimate Spring Fashion Collab
next post
FlavCity Heats Up Wellness Scene with Othership Collaboration in NYC

Related Posts

Josh Meyers Brings Laughs, Curiosity and Golden State...

January 19, 2026

HBO Max Hosts a Legendary Advance Fan Screening...

January 19, 2026

Executive Producers Kevin Abbott and Pamela Fryman Talk...

January 18, 2026

Interview with Iyanla Vanzant | OWN’s Iyanla: The...

January 18, 2026

Redefining the Narrative: NeAndre Broussard on Style, Storytelling,...

January 18, 2026

On the Carpet: Charlie the Wonderdog

January 18, 2026

Andre Chez: A Study in Musical Leadership

January 18, 2026

Jason Segel Talks Jimmy’s Next Chapter in ‘Shrinking’...

January 16, 2026

On the Carpet: ‘Dead Man’s Wire’

January 16, 2026

Freddie Gibbs, RJ Cyler and Ryan Prows Talk...

January 15, 2026

Digital Cover No. 19

The Knockturnal Merch

Follow Us On The Gram

Follow on Instagram

About The Site

We are a collective of creative tastemakers made up of fashion, music and entertainment industry insiders. It’s all about access. You want it. We have it.

Terms Of Use

Privacy Policy

Meet The Team

CONTACT US

For general inquiries and more info on The Knockturnal, please contact our staff at:
info@theknockturnal.com
fashion@theknockturnal.com
advertising@theknockturnal.com
editorial@theknockturnal.com
beauty@theknockturnal.com

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Linkedin
  • Youtube

© Copyright - The Knockturnal | Developed by CI Design + Media

The Knockturnal
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • Music
  • Lifestyle
  • News
  • Videos
  • Covers
  • Merch