Not One Less Dir. By Zhang Yimou, 1999 "Not One Less," recently released on video, tells the poignant story of a substitute teacher in an impoverished rural Chinese elementary school. Teacher Wei -- at thirteen years old she is barely older than her students -- has to travel to the city to bring back a student who went there to find a job. The film is a critique of the state-capitalist Chinese government's neglect of the peasantry and the development of capitalist relations in the countryside. Together, these factors drive millions of rural children out of school into the cities to look for work, reversing the gains in basic education won under Maoist leadership from 1949 to 1976. The first three-quarters of the film are harsh. With the exceptions of a few of the schoolchildren and the original teacher, the characters are motivated by self-interest, money, and distrust. Much of the dialogue is haggling over prices. Teacher Wei, for example, simply writes lessons on the blackboard and then locks the children in the classroom until they've copied the lessons down -- since she's being paid to keep the children in school. In the city, few people pay attention to the problems of the lost schoolboy and teacher. They are reunited only after the manager of the local TV station puts the teacher on a popular program, out of his concern for the girl and poor rural schools generally. Teacher Wei and her student return to their village with chalk and other school supplies donated by hundreds of concerned viewers. This ITAL deus ex machina END "happy ending" only sharpens the film's critique. Why should the well-being of the student, teacher, and school depend on the good-heartedness of one official? An epilog claims that 15% of the rural students who quit school are able to return alter thanks to charitable donations. What of the other 85%? That so few are able to finish elementary school and then only with the help of kind individuals is a strong indictment of the current state-capitalist regime in China. Director Yimou is unabashedly sentimental. For example, when asked what he will remember most about his experience in the city, the boy says quietly, "That I was forced to beg for food." Such strong, simple emotions may rub Amerikan audiences the wrong way -- they may find it maudlin or see the whole situation as artificial. MIM has said that Amerikans need to learn when to get angry; it follows that they also need to re-learn what tragedy and sorrow are. Rather than get misty-eyed over whether Nicole will dump her sugar daddy and get down with Ewan, audiences should gat sad -- and then get mad -- over the fact that hundreds of millions of children have their potential destroyed by poverty.