With his big-budget wuxia spectacles Hero and 
              House of Flying Daggers, Zhang Yimou was introduced to 
              mainstream audiences around the world. But those of us who loved 
              his work way before that might have preferred his more modest yet 
              intensely moving dramas like Raise the Red Lantern and 
              Not One Less. 
His new film, Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles, sees 
              him returning to his roots as master director who's attuned to every 
              single nuance of the human emotion. Zhang came up with this remarkable 
              story with writers Zou Jingzhi and Wang Bin, about an old Japanese 
              fisherman (Ken Takakura) who receives news that his estranged son 
              has terminal cancer. Although the old man has not spoken to his 
              son for years, he goes to visits him at the hospital to seek reconciliation 
              but the latter stubbornly turns him away. 
Before the son became ill, he was actively making documentaries 
              about mask operas in China, but could not complete an important 
              scene. So as a gesture of his love for his son, the old man decides 
              to travel to China to finish what his son had set out to do — 
              even though the old man has no knowledge of Chinese customs and 
              language. 
And that, dear readers, makes up only one third of the heartrending 
              plot. The story continues on in a beautiful way, throwing up unexpected 
              twists and reversals. And when the ending finally comes, you may 
              find yourself weeping like a little girl lost trapped in an onion 
              farm. 
Zhang proves that how adept he is at capturing raw human emotions 
              through his miraculous skills as a storyteller. We can't remember 
              the last time we were this moved and satisfied watching a simple 
              human drama about ordinary people making amends for the past. We 
              loved this movie more than any mega-budget, formula-bound spectacle 
              that Hollywood rolled out this summer. We think you might too. 
