Maineland
China
106 people rated Stella and Harry are affluent, cosmopolitan teenagers who are part of the enormous wave of "parachute students" from Mainland China enrolling in U.S. private schools. Shot over three years in China and the U.S., MAINELAND tells a multi-layered coming-of-age tale, following this buoyant, fun-loving girl and introspective boy as they settle into a boarding school in blue-collar small-town rural Maine. They come seeking a Western-style education, escape from the dreaded Chinese college entrance exam, and the promise of a Hollywood-style U.S. high school experience. But as their fuzzy visions of the American dream slowly gain more clarity, their relationship to home takes on a surprising new aspect.
Documentary
Cast (1)
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User Reviews
Ruth Berhane
29/05/2023 22:46
source: Maineland
Nomfezeko Nkoi
19/05/2023 00:05
Moviecut—Maineland
حسن المسلاتي
22/11/2022 17:01
Maineland was well-received at its world premiere at SXSW Film Festival. It is an interesting look at Chinese exchange students going attending a private school in Maine. The director does an intrepid job following the young high school students lives from urban China to the contrast of rural Maine. Some of the scenes are certainly entertaining, but the film seems to lack a clear direction and story arc. It does too little to clearly explore the sociological impact of both the young people and how they impacted those around them. They didn't really focus on the racism they experienced or the impact on their peers. There was too much of just cinema verite presentation without really clearly steering the narrative clearly enough. Often the exchange students seem just like any other student coming-of-age, but that doesn't provide a very intriguing story for the audience. A different editing of the same material might well have produced a more compelling portrait of what happens when cultures collide.
Nick🔥🌚🔥
22/11/2022 17:01
Like the small college in Maine that is actively recruiting foreign students I too live in a city in Canada where the university has a significant proportion of Chinese (and also South Korean) students.
This documentary tells us why they come to North America and their attempts to adjust to a new culture - and also find out more about their own culture. Indeed it must be a shock to these students when they arrive in Maine from an industrialized China (Shanghai) and encounter so much open land.
They come to North America to escape the ceaseless pressure of round-the-clock studying in their country and in many cases to learn English.
I appreciated the shift back-and-forth between China and Maine that exemplified well the large physical and cultural differences.
This film gives us a unique view of cross-cultural experiences.
user6056427530772
22/11/2022 17:01
Being an International student myself, it's easy to relate to this carefully crafted documentary. America and China are two very different countries with vastly different cultures. The film looked closely on the students journey of growing up within this cultural clash and did a great job portraying the struggles of young adults. It is hard, for us, being separated from our parents, facing an entirely new country with complete confidence. The documentary attempts to grasp the deeper intentions of Interantional students by asking questions to its audiences. Questions like, "Why are they doing this?", or, "In which way are we different from each other?" are asked and answered through the lives of these two narrators in the course of three years. Hopefully, this documentary will serve as a pioneer on the understanding between these two cultures, and further, teaching us how to learn from our differences. We are always more the same then we are different.
Gloria_Kakudji
22/11/2022 17:01
An incredibly lyrical film that is at times a quiet discussion about culture, at times an open meditation on coming-of-age. The subject matter is timely, characters are engaging, and the original score is beautiful. But the real star is the cinematography where each scene is carefully juxtaposed against a scene later. While the narrative unfolds through two years of teenage lives, recurring images, symbols and dialogues remind us that life is never truly linear. And so little by little, we are inevitably drawn to the journeys of the two young protagonists. Who will they become? Will they become who their parents (who sent them from Chinese mega-cities to rural America) wish them to be? Will they become who they themselves thought that they would be? Or will they become who we the viewers wish them to be? In the process of watching these teenagers grow up, we come to see ourselves more (and perhaps in equal parts less) clearly in a complex world.
Karelle Obone
22/11/2022 17:01
Music is much too loud, can not hear anything they say.
So useless movie to me.
hanisha misson
22/11/2022 04:28
Maineland