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One Child Nation

One Child Nation is a 2019 American documentary film directed by Nanfu Wang and Jialing Zhang about the fallout of China's one-child policy that lasted from 1979 to 2015. The documentary is made up of various interviews with former village chiefs, state officials, ex-human traffickers, artists, midwives, journalists, researchers, and victims of the one-child policy. Nanfu Wang stated, in a roundtable discussion, that when creating the film she wanted to do a "360 degree with the policy—people who carried out the policy and people who were the victims of the policy".[2] During the film, Nanfu Wang discovers more about the ties her own family have with the one-child policy, as they unsuccessfully attempt to locate her cousin who was abandoned by her father’s sister in 1989. By the end of the film, Nanfu Wang admits that despite the horrors of the one-child policy, there is an overwhelming acceptance of the policy that remains in China, and a shared attitude that there was no other choice. The closing scenes of the film show the growing propaganda for two child families, presenting the repetition of state interference with family planning within China.[3]

One Child Nation
Theatrical release poster
Directed by
Produced by
  • Nanfu Wang
  • Jialing Zhang
  • Christoph Jorg
  • Julie Goldman
  • Christopher Clements
  • Carolyn Hepburn
Cinematography
  • Nanfu Wang
  • Yuanchen Liu
Edited byNanfu Wang
Music by
  • Nathan Halpern
  • Chris Ruggiero
Production
companies
  • Next Generation
  • ITVS
  • WDR/Arte
  • Motto Pictures
  • Pumpernickel Films
Distributed byAmazon Studios
Release dates
  • January 26, 2019 (2019-01-26) (Sundance)
  • August 9, 2019 (2019-08-09) (United States)
Running time
89 minutes
CountryUnited States
Languages
Box office$271,841[1]

One Child Nation premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 26, 2019, where it was awarded the U.S. Grand Jury Prize: Documentary Award, and was theatrically released in the United States on August 9, 2019, by Amazon Studios.

Historical context edit

This documentary focuses on the impact of the one-child policy which dominated family planning in Post-Mao China from 1979 to 2015. The state prioritised the scientific motivations behind the one-child policy, hoping to brake the increasing population. By 1980, officials claimed that the one-child policy had averted over 300 million births.[4] In the first stages of the policy, women were encouraged to delay getting pregnant, and state slogans were devised to encourage this, such as ‘later, longer, fewer’. The policy was far more readily accepted in urban areas in contrast to rural areas. Rural areas resented the policy vehemently, resulting in village cadres being attacked frequently for attempting to implement the policy.[5] Village Officials would administer fines, destroy property, confiscate possessions, and abduct women for forced abortion and sterilizations. Therefore, as fear rose so did female infanticide and the gender ratio became imbalanced.[6] Though, it was not just female babies who were killed,to have a male child was commonly far more sought after within Chinese culture. Due to this, there became a disproportionately large number of men in comparison to women as time went on – this, in turn, resulted in a further rise in ‘bare sticks’.  Many have condemned the state’s lack of concern over the social repercussions of the one-child policy. ‘One Child Nation’ focuses acutely on the impact of the one-child policy on an individual level.

Documentary topics edit

One-child policy edit

The One-Child Policy is the main theme of ‘One Child Nation’ as Nanfu Wang explores its impact. Within the conducted interview with Zaodi Wang (Nanfu Wang’s mother), she reveals the struggles that she faced as a result of going against the one-child policy, and birthing two children: Nanfu Wang and Zhihao Wang. The audience is informed that Zaodi Wang’s father, Zhimei Wang, opposed the movement to sterilise Zaodi Wang after Nanfu Wang’s birth. They avoided this forced sterilisation by agreeing to wait five years before having another child. Not fully discussed within this documentary was the inclusion of this condition which allowed women to become pregnant again with a second child and would often cost the family a fine of approximately 4,000 yuan ($500 USD), and was more common in rural areas.[7] Zaodi reveals that if she had birthed another girl, she would have felt that she had no choice but to abandon her. Nanfu Wang also admits that she felt embarrassed growing up because she had a sibling, and was not an only child like the rest of her peers at school. The documentary goes on to discuss the prominent role of state propaganda, such as opera, in spreading the one-child policy. In many areas slogans, such as “Better blood flowing like streams than children born outside the state plan” were painted onto village walls, in order to fear-monger and spread the one-child policy further.[8]

Child infanticide edit

The term ‘Child Infanticide’, usually and somewhat misleadingly referred to as ‘Female infanticide’, describes the act of killing a newborn. When used in association with China, this term also branches out to the act of abandoning a newborn for dead. Specific examples are explored within Nanfu Wang’s own family as her mother’s brother abandoned his child in the market, in the hope of somebody rescuing her, however nobody did and she died after having spent three days on the streets. In addition, Nanfu interviews artist Peng Wang whose artwork, focusing on the idea of ‘trash’, presents the horrors of the one-child policy as he incorporates graphic images of dead, abandoned babies in medical waste bags in the middle of rubbish heaps. In 2014, Peng Wang was evicted from his home in Songzhuang, by the Beijing state security police as a result of his outspoken opinions and controversial art.[9] His studio was also destroyed by state officials in 2021 as a result of his warnings to the world about China’s handling of the Covid-19 Pandemic.[10] The documentary’s interrogation of child infanticide aims to demonstrate the extent of state control within China. In the New Yorker’s Roundtable Discussion series, Nanfu Wang states “Ironically the people that we want to see the film most are the people who can’t see. It’s Chinese people.[11]” Thus highlighting the continuing problem of state control within China.

Forced abortion and sterilization edit

The act of both forced abortion and sterilization was present throughout the existence of the one-child policy in China. It should be clarified that the Chinese national government never officially legitimised coerced abortion.[12] However, throughout ‘One Child Nation’, those who implemented these policies disagree. Nanfu Wang’s interview with Tunde Wang describes the duties of the rural village officials in implementing the one-child policy. Tunde Wang talks of how women who refused to be sterilised would be collectively forced to by a group of village officials; he admits “I couldn’t bear to watch. Honestly, I couldn’t take part in that.[13]” In addition, Nanfu Wang speaks with Huaru Yuan, a rural midwife, to establish the role of village doctors and midwives in assisting the state policy. Huaru Yuan states “I’ve done a total of between 50,000 and 60,000 sterilizations and abortions. Many I have induced alive and killed. But I had no choice, it was the government’s policy.[13]” This section unveils the way that village doctors and midwives would travel around the county performing sterilizations and abortions. Some of these procedures would be carried out on unwilling, abducted women who had been brought to the medical station by government officials. The extent of trauma was somewhat dictated by the government official; some women describe being dragged from their beds in the middle of the night and being taken to be sterilised. The state guaranteed that overzealous government officials would be retrained and disciplined, however this rarely happened.[14]

Human trafficking edit

The documentary explores the role of human trafficking within China during the domination of the one-child policy. In this instance, the role of Human Trafficking mostly outlines the act of collecting already abandoned babies. Nanfu Wang interviews ex-human trafficker Yueneng Duan to investigate his methods. Yueneng Duan, and his family, worked in the Guangdong and Hunan provinces in the 1990s, finding children to sell to orphanages. Yueneng Duan reveals “I used to walk on this road day and night to see if there were any abandoned babies. If so, I would bring them to the orphanages. The orphanages would pay me $200 for each baby I brought in. They then put them up for international adoption.[13]" Yueneng Duan was prosecuted and sentenced to 6 years in prison. Within this section, the documentary introduces Brian and Longlan Stuy and their mission to reunite Chinese families with their lost children who were adopted internationally by US citizens. Brian Stuy also publishes his research, Open Secret: Cash and Coercion in China’s International Adoption Program. He reveals that children were being supplied for adoption through three main ways: ‘baby buying’ schemes within Chinese orphanages, ‘education’ programs which facilitated the falsification of date of birth records, and ‘confiscation’ of children led by population control officials.[15]

List of appearances edit

  • Nanfu Wang - Narrator
  • Shihua Wang - Nanfu Wang’s maternal uncle
  • Zaodi Wang - Nanfu Wang’s Mother
  • Guijiao Wang – Nanfu Wang’s paternal aunt
  • Zhimei Wang – Nanfu Wang’s Grandfather
  • Peng Wang – Artist
  • Zhihao Wang – Nanfu Wang’s Brother
  • Yueneng Duan – Ex Human Trafficker
  • Tunde Wang – Former Village Chief
  • Jiaoming Pang – Journalist and Author
  • Xianwen Liu – Family Planning Propaganda Official
  • Huaru Yuan – Midwife
  • Shuquin Jiang – Family Planning Official
  • Brian Stuy – Owner and Founder of Research-China (Husband of Longlan Stuy)
  • Longlan Stuy – Research-China's in-country guide and translator (Wife of Brian Stuy)
  • Shuangjie Zeng – Young girl separated from twin due to One-Child Policy

[13]

Production edit

Both directors Wang and Zhang were born under the one-child policy in China during the 1980s, but knew little of its effects as it was second nature among the country's populace. After moving to the United States and getting pregnant with her first child in 2017, Wang returned to China in an effort to "explore the direct effects of the 'population war' on her family... acquaintances from her rural village, midwives, family planning officials, journalists and artists.[16]"

Reception edit

Box office edit

The film opened at one theater in New York City and one in Los Angeles and grossed $22,244 in its opening weekend, with Amazon reporting "sold-out shows throughout the weekend.[17]"

Critical response edit

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 98% of 100 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 8.4/10. The website's consensus reads: "As illuminating as it is accessible, One Child Nation probes a painful chapter in Chinese history with piercing clarity."[18] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 85 out of 100, based on 25 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[19]

David Rooney of The Hollywood Reporter called the film "a valuable record and a sober but frightening illustration of the dark side of this government-controlled experiment" and praised the editing and musical score.[16] Ram Venkat Srikar of Cinema Sentries called the film "an unapologetic description of the unpleasant aftermath of China's One-Child Policy".[20] Inkoo Kang at Slate wrote that the film is "best viewed as an oral history of a desperate experiment in a fast-changing, selectively amnesiac country" but that "its directness and intimacy lend an indelibility that encyclopedic framing could never approximate."[21] An independent reviewer noted that the film primarily explores the policy’s impact on a few interconnected families in rural China rather than presenting a comprehensive view of the nation.[22]

ChinaFile published a set of critiques of "the film’s many lacunae, distortions (including overgeneralizations), and failures to address the policy in broader perspective, especially its clear and substantial benefits to significant numbers of women".[23]

Foreign language adaptions edit

The documentary film was aired in German by TV-channel arte on 22. October 2019 as "Land der Einzelkinder".[24]

References edit

  1. ^ "One Child Nation". Box Office Mojo. from the original on July 23, 2019. Retrieved September 20, 2019.
  2. ^ Greenhalgh, Susan (June 2003). "Science, Modernity, and the Making of China's One-Child Policy". Population and Development Review. 29 (2): 163–196. doi:10.1111/j.1728-4457.2003.00163.x.
  3. ^ Judd, Ellen R. (2019-11-04). "Women and China's Revolutions Gail Hershatter Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2018 xx + 397 pp. £24.95; $36.00 ISBN 978-1-4422-1569-6". The China Quarterly. 240: 1167–1168. doi:10.1017/s0305741019001279. ISSN 0305-7410. S2CID 211304717.
  4. ^ Greenhalgh, Susan (June 2003). "Science, Modernity, and the Making of China's One-Child Policy". Population and Development Review. 29 (2): 163–196. doi:10.1111/j.1728-4457.2003.00163.x. ISSN 0098-7921.
  5. ^ Judd, Ellen R. (2019-11-04). "Women and China's Revolutions Gail Hershatter Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2018 xx + 397 pp. £24.95; $36.00 ISBN 978-1-4422-1569-6". The China Quarterly. 240: 1167–1168. doi:10.1017/s0305741019001279. ISSN 0305-7410. S2CID 211304717.
  6. ^ Ebenstein, Avraham (2010). "The "Missing Girls" of China and the Unintended Consequences of the One Child Policy". Journal of Human Resources. 45 (1): 87–115. doi:10.1353/jhr.2010.0003. ISSN 1548-8004. S2CID 201752851.
  7. ^ Feng, Wang; Gu, Baochang; Cai, Yong (March 2016). "The End of China's One-Child Policy". Studies in Family Planning. 47 (1): 83–86. doi:10.1111/j.1728-4465.2016.00052.x. ISSN 0039-3665. PMID 27027994.
  8. ^ WANG, GUOYAN (2018-03-19). "Wall Slogans: the Communication of China's Family Planning Policy in Rural Areas". Rural History. 29 (1): 99–112. doi:10.1017/s095679331800002x. ISSN 0956-7933. S2CID 165502160.
  9. ^ Cuzman, Miruna (2020-07-27), "An Artist Metamorphosed: William Orpen's Modernist Paintings of the First World War", War and Art, Brill | Schöningh, pp. 29–49, doi:10.30965/9783657702923_003, ISBN 9783657702923, S2CID 225474540, retrieved 2022-05-03
  10. ^ "Beijing Officials Demolish Studio of Activist Artist". Radio Free Asia. Retrieved 2022-05-03.
  11. ^ Nanfu Wang on Growing Up With China's One Child Policy & State Propaganda | Close Up, retrieved 2022-05-03
  12. ^ "Jing-Bao Nie (1999), 'The Problem of Coerced Abortion in China and Related Ethical Issues', Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics, 8, pp. 463–75", Abortion, Routledge, pp. 445–458, 2017-03-02, doi:10.4324/9781315263502-26, ISBN 9781315263502, retrieved 2022-05-03
  13. ^ a b c d Petruska, Karen (2018-01-03), "Amazon Prime Video", From Networks to Netflix, New York: Routledge, pp. 355–364, doi:10.4324/9781315658643-33, ISBN 978-1-315-65864-3, retrieved 2022-05-03
  14. ^ OOSTERVELD, V. L. (1996-10-01). "The Canadian Guidelines on Gender-Related Persecution: An Evaluation". International Journal of Refugee Law. 8 (4): 569–596. doi:10.1093/ijrl/8.4.569. ISSN 0953-8186.
  15. ^ McKenna, Brian G.; Simpson, Alexander I.F.; Coverdale, John H. (July 2003). "Patients' perceptions of coercion on admission to forensic psychiatric hospital: a comparison study". International Journal of Law and Psychiatry. 26 (4): 355–372. doi:10.1016/s0160-2527(03)00046-3. ISSN 0160-2527. PMID 12726810.
  16. ^ a b David Rooney (January 26, 2019). "'One Child Nation': Film Review – Sundance 2019". The Hollywood Reporter. from the original on February 4, 2021. Retrieved August 8, 2019.
  17. ^ Brooks, Brian (August 11, 2019). "'The Peanut Butter Falcon' Leads Mixed Weekend; Music Doc 'Bring The Soul' Croons; 'The Farewell' Salutes $10M: Specialty Box Office". Deadline Hollywood. from the original on February 25, 2021. Retrieved August 11, 2019.
  18. ^ "One Child Nation". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved October 10, 2021.  
  19. ^ "One Child Nation". Metacritic. Fandom, Inc. Retrieved 15 October 2021.
  20. ^ Ram Venkat Srikar (December 19, 2019). "'One Child Nation': Film Review – MAMI 2019". from the original on January 14, 2020. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
  21. ^ Kang, Inkoo (9 August 2019). "One Child Nation Is a Haunting Documentary About a Country's Attempts to Justify the Unjustifiable". Slate. from the original on 15 November 2021. Retrieved 15 November 2021.
  22. ^ Ryan, Patrick (5 May 2023). "Film Review: One Child Nation". SSRN Working Paper. SSRN 4428151. Retrieved 5 May 2023.
  23. ^ Li, Jie; Greenhalgh, Susan; Thornber, Karen (6 February 2020). "What a Picture of China's One-Child Policy Leaves Out". ChinaFile. New York: Asia Society. Retrieved 21 November 2021.
  24. ^ "Land der Einzelkinder" (in German). Mitteldeutsche Zeitung. 21 October 2019. Retrieved 1 November 2023.

Further reading edit

Media
  • "'One Child Nation' Exposes the Tragic Consequences of Chinese Population Control". Reason TV. 2019-08-16.

External links edit

child, nation, this, article, need, rewritten, comply, with, wikipedia, quality, standards, help, talk, page, contain, suggestions, january, 2023, 2019, american, documentary, film, directed, nanfu, wang, jialing, zhang, about, fallout, china, child, policy, t. This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions January 2023 One Child Nation is a 2019 American documentary film directed by Nanfu Wang and Jialing Zhang about the fallout of China s one child policy that lasted from 1979 to 2015 The documentary is made up of various interviews with former village chiefs state officials ex human traffickers artists midwives journalists researchers and victims of the one child policy Nanfu Wang stated in a roundtable discussion that when creating the film she wanted to do a 360 degree with the policy people who carried out the policy and people who were the victims of the policy 2 During the film Nanfu Wang discovers more about the ties her own family have with the one child policy as they unsuccessfully attempt to locate her cousin who was abandoned by her father s sister in 1989 By the end of the film Nanfu Wang admits that despite the horrors of the one child policy there is an overwhelming acceptance of the policy that remains in China and a shared attitude that there was no other choice The closing scenes of the film show the growing propaganda for two child families presenting the repetition of state interference with family planning within China 3 One Child NationTheatrical release posterDirected byNanfu WangJialing ZhangProduced byNanfu WangJialing ZhangChristoph JorgJulie GoldmanChristopher ClementsCarolyn HepburnCinematographyNanfu WangYuanchen LiuEdited byNanfu WangMusic byNathan HalpernChris RuggieroProductioncompaniesNext GenerationITVSWDR ArteMotto PicturesPumpernickel FilmsDistributed byAmazon StudiosRelease datesJanuary 26 2019 2019 01 26 Sundance August 9 2019 2019 08 09 United States Running time89 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguagesEnglishGan ChineseMandarin ChineseBox office 271 841 1 One Child Nation premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 26 2019 where it was awarded the U S Grand Jury Prize Documentary Award and was theatrically released in the United States on August 9 2019 by Amazon Studios Contents 1 Historical context 2 Documentary topics 2 1 One child policy 2 2 Child infanticide 2 3 Forced abortion and sterilization 2 4 Human trafficking 3 List of appearances 4 Production 5 Reception 5 1 Box office 5 2 Critical response 5 3 Foreign language adaptions 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistorical context editThis documentary focuses on the impact of the one child policy which dominated family planning in Post Mao China from 1979 to 2015 The state prioritised the scientific motivations behind the one child policy hoping to brake the increasing population By 1980 officials claimed that the one child policy had averted over 300 million births 4 In the first stages of the policy women were encouraged to delay getting pregnant and state slogans were devised to encourage this such as later longer fewer The policy was far more readily accepted in urban areas in contrast to rural areas Rural areas resented the policy vehemently resulting in village cadres being attacked frequently for attempting to implement the policy 5 Village Officials would administer fines destroy property confiscate possessions and abduct women for forced abortion and sterilizations Therefore as fear rose so did female infanticide and the gender ratio became imbalanced 6 Though it was not just female babies who were killed to have a male child was commonly far more sought after within Chinese culture Due to this there became a disproportionately large number of men in comparison to women as time went on this in turn resulted in a further rise in bare sticks Many have condemned the state s lack of concern over the social repercussions of the one child policy One Child Nation focuses acutely on the impact of the one child policy on an individual level Documentary topics editOne child policy edit The One Child Policy is the main theme of One Child Nation as Nanfu Wang explores its impact Within the conducted interview with Zaodi Wang Nanfu Wang s mother she reveals the struggles that she faced as a result of going against the one child policy and birthing two children Nanfu Wang and Zhihao Wang The audience is informed that Zaodi Wang s father Zhimei Wang opposed the movement to sterilise Zaodi Wang after Nanfu Wang s birth They avoided this forced sterilisation by agreeing to wait five years before having another child Not fully discussed within this documentary was the inclusion of this condition which allowed women to become pregnant again with a second child and would often cost the family a fine of approximately 4 000 yuan 500 USD and was more common in rural areas 7 Zaodi reveals that if she had birthed another girl she would have felt that she had no choice but to abandon her Nanfu Wang also admits that she felt embarrassed growing up because she had a sibling and was not an only child like the rest of her peers at school The documentary goes on to discuss the prominent role of state propaganda such as opera in spreading the one child policy In many areas slogans such as Better blood flowing like streams than children born outside the state plan were painted onto village walls in order to fear monger and spread the one child policy further 8 Child infanticide edit The term Child Infanticide usually and somewhat misleadingly referred to as Female infanticide describes the act of killing a newborn When used in association with China this term also branches out to the act of abandoning a newborn for dead Specific examples are explored within Nanfu Wang s own family as her mother s brother abandoned his child in the market in the hope of somebody rescuing her however nobody did and she died after having spent three days on the streets In addition Nanfu interviews artist Peng Wang whose artwork focusing on the idea of trash presents the horrors of the one child policy as he incorporates graphic images of dead abandoned babies in medical waste bags in the middle of rubbish heaps In 2014 Peng Wang was evicted from his home in Songzhuang by the Beijing state security police as a result of his outspoken opinions and controversial art 9 His studio was also destroyed by state officials in 2021 as a result of his warnings to the world about China s handling of the Covid 19 Pandemic 10 The documentary s interrogation of child infanticide aims to demonstrate the extent of state control within China In the New Yorker s Roundtable Discussion series Nanfu Wang states Ironically the people that we want to see the film most are the people who can t see It s Chinese people 11 Thus highlighting the continuing problem of state control within China Forced abortion and sterilization edit The act of both forced abortion and sterilization was present throughout the existence of the one child policy in China It should be clarified that the Chinese national government never officially legitimised coerced abortion 12 However throughout One Child Nation those who implemented these policies disagree Nanfu Wang s interview with Tunde Wang describes the duties of the rural village officials in implementing the one child policy Tunde Wang talks of how women who refused to be sterilised would be collectively forced to by a group of village officials he admits I couldn t bear to watch Honestly I couldn t take part in that 13 In addition Nanfu Wang speaks with Huaru Yuan a rural midwife to establish the role of village doctors and midwives in assisting the state policy Huaru Yuan states I ve done a total of between 50 000 and 60 000 sterilizations and abortions Many I have induced alive and killed But I had no choice it was the government s policy 13 This section unveils the way that village doctors and midwives would travel around the county performing sterilizations and abortions Some of these procedures would be carried out on unwilling abducted women who had been brought to the medical station by government officials The extent of trauma was somewhat dictated by the government official some women describe being dragged from their beds in the middle of the night and being taken to be sterilised The state guaranteed that overzealous government officials would be retrained and disciplined however this rarely happened 14 Human trafficking edit The documentary explores the role of human trafficking within China during the domination of the one child policy In this instance the role of Human Trafficking mostly outlines the act of collecting already abandoned babies Nanfu Wang interviews ex human trafficker Yueneng Duan to investigate his methods Yueneng Duan and his family worked in the Guangdong and Hunan provinces in the 1990s finding children to sell to orphanages Yueneng Duan reveals I used to walk on this road day and night to see if there were any abandoned babies If so I would bring them to the orphanages The orphanages would pay me 200 for each baby I brought in They then put them up for international adoption 13 Yueneng Duan was prosecuted and sentenced to 6 years in prison Within this section the documentary introduces Brian and Longlan Stuy and their mission to reunite Chinese families with their lost children who were adopted internationally by US citizens Brian Stuy also publishes his research Open Secret Cash and Coercion in China s International Adoption Program He reveals that children were being supplied for adoption through three main ways baby buying schemes within Chinese orphanages education programs which facilitated the falsification of date of birth records and confiscation of children led by population control officials 15 List of appearances editNanfu Wang NarratorShihua Wang Nanfu Wang s maternal uncleZaodi Wang Nanfu Wang s MotherGuijiao Wang Nanfu Wang s paternal auntZhimei Wang Nanfu Wang s GrandfatherPeng Wang ArtistZhihao Wang Nanfu Wang s BrotherYueneng Duan Ex Human TraffickerTunde Wang Former Village ChiefJiaoming Pang Journalist and AuthorXianwen Liu Family Planning Propaganda OfficialHuaru Yuan MidwifeShuquin Jiang Family Planning OfficialBrian Stuy Owner and Founder of Research China Husband of Longlan Stuy Longlan Stuy Research China s in country guide and translator Wife of Brian Stuy Shuangjie Zeng Young girl separated from twin due to One Child Policy 13 Production editBoth directors Wang and Zhang were born under the one child policy in China during the 1980s but knew little of its effects as it was second nature among the country s populace After moving to the United States and getting pregnant with her first child in 2017 Wang returned to China in an effort to explore the direct effects of the population war on her family acquaintances from her rural village midwives family planning officials journalists and artists 16 Reception editBox office edit The film opened at one theater in New York City and one in Los Angeles and grossed 22 244 in its opening weekend with Amazon reporting sold out shows throughout the weekend 17 Critical response edit On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes 98 of 100 critics reviews are positive with an average rating of 8 4 10 The website s consensus reads As illuminating as it is accessible One Child Nation probes a painful chapter in Chinese history with piercing clarity 18 Metacritic which uses a weighted average assigned the film a score of 85 out of 100 based on 25 critics indicating universal acclaim 19 David Rooney of The Hollywood Reporter called the film a valuable record and a sober but frightening illustration of the dark side of this government controlled experiment and praised the editing and musical score 16 Ram Venkat Srikar of Cinema Sentries called the film an unapologetic description of the unpleasant aftermath of China s One Child Policy 20 Inkoo Kang at Slate wrote that the film is best viewed as an oral history of a desperate experiment in a fast changing selectively amnesiac country but that its directness and intimacy lend an indelibility that encyclopedic framing could never approximate 21 An independent reviewer noted that the film primarily explores the policy s impact on a few interconnected families in rural China rather than presenting a comprehensive view of the nation 22 ChinaFile published a set of critiques of the film s many lacunae distortions including overgeneralizations and failures to address the policy in broader perspective especially its clear and substantial benefits to significant numbers of women 23 Foreign language adaptions edit The documentary film was aired in German by TV channel arte on 22 October 2019 as Land der Einzelkinder 24 References edit One Child Nation Box Office Mojo Archived from the original on July 23 2019 Retrieved September 20 2019 Greenhalgh Susan June 2003 Science Modernity and the Making of China s One Child Policy Population and Development Review 29 2 163 196 doi 10 1111 j 1728 4457 2003 00163 x Judd Ellen R 2019 11 04 Women and China s Revolutions Gail Hershatter Lanham MD Rowman and Littlefield 2018 xx 397 pp 24 95 36 00 ISBN 978 1 4422 1569 6 The China Quarterly 240 1167 1168 doi 10 1017 s0305741019001279 ISSN 0305 7410 S2CID 211304717 Greenhalgh Susan June 2003 Science Modernity and the Making of China s One Child Policy Population and Development Review 29 2 163 196 doi 10 1111 j 1728 4457 2003 00163 x ISSN 0098 7921 Judd Ellen R 2019 11 04 Women and China s Revolutions Gail Hershatter Lanham MD Rowman and Littlefield 2018 xx 397 pp 24 95 36 00 ISBN 978 1 4422 1569 6 The China Quarterly 240 1167 1168 doi 10 1017 s0305741019001279 ISSN 0305 7410 S2CID 211304717 Ebenstein Avraham 2010 The Missing Girls of China and the Unintended Consequences of the One Child Policy Journal of Human Resources 45 1 87 115 doi 10 1353 jhr 2010 0003 ISSN 1548 8004 S2CID 201752851 Feng Wang Gu Baochang Cai Yong March 2016 The End of China s One Child Policy Studies in Family Planning 47 1 83 86 doi 10 1111 j 1728 4465 2016 00052 x ISSN 0039 3665 PMID 27027994 WANG GUOYAN 2018 03 19 Wall Slogans the Communication of China s Family Planning Policy in Rural Areas Rural History 29 1 99 112 doi 10 1017 s095679331800002x ISSN 0956 7933 S2CID 165502160 Cuzman Miruna 2020 07 27 An Artist Metamorphosed William Orpen s Modernist Paintings of the First World War War and Art Brill Schoningh pp 29 49 doi 10 30965 9783657702923 003 ISBN 9783657702923 S2CID 225474540 retrieved 2022 05 03 Beijing Officials Demolish Studio of Activist Artist Radio Free Asia Retrieved 2022 05 03 Nanfu Wang on Growing Up With China s One Child Policy amp State Propaganda Close Up retrieved 2022 05 03 Jing Bao Nie 1999 The Problem of Coerced Abortion in China and Related Ethical Issues Cambridge Quarterly of Healthcare Ethics 8 pp 463 75 Abortion Routledge pp 445 458 2017 03 02 doi 10 4324 9781315263502 26 ISBN 9781315263502 retrieved 2022 05 03 a b c d Petruska Karen 2018 01 03 Amazon Prime Video From Networks to Netflix New York Routledge pp 355 364 doi 10 4324 9781315658643 33 ISBN 978 1 315 65864 3 retrieved 2022 05 03 OOSTERVELD V L 1996 10 01 The Canadian Guidelines on Gender Related Persecution An Evaluation International Journal of Refugee Law 8 4 569 596 doi 10 1093 ijrl 8 4 569 ISSN 0953 8186 McKenna Brian G Simpson Alexander I F Coverdale John H July 2003 Patients perceptions of coercion on admission to forensic psychiatric hospital a comparison study International Journal of Law and Psychiatry 26 4 355 372 doi 10 1016 s0160 2527 03 00046 3 ISSN 0160 2527 PMID 12726810 a b David Rooney January 26 2019 One Child Nation Film Review Sundance 2019 The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on February 4 2021 Retrieved August 8 2019 Brooks Brian August 11 2019 The Peanut Butter Falcon Leads Mixed Weekend Music Doc Bring The Soul Croons The Farewell Salutes 10M Specialty Box Office Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on February 25 2021 Retrieved August 11 2019 One Child Nation Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media Retrieved October 10 2021 nbsp One Child Nation Metacritic Fandom Inc Retrieved 15 October 2021 Ram Venkat Srikar December 19 2019 One Child Nation Film Review MAMI 2019 Archived from the original on January 14 2020 Retrieved January 14 2020 Kang Inkoo 9 August 2019 One Child Nation Is a Haunting Documentary About a Country s Attempts to Justify the Unjustifiable Slate Archived from the original on 15 November 2021 Retrieved 15 November 2021 Ryan Patrick 5 May 2023 Film Review One Child Nation SSRN Working Paper SSRN 4428151 Retrieved 5 May 2023 Li Jie Greenhalgh Susan Thornber Karen 6 February 2020 What a Picture of China s One Child Policy Leaves Out ChinaFile New York Asia Society Retrieved 21 November 2021 Land der Einzelkinder in German Mitteldeutsche Zeitung 21 October 2019 Retrieved 1 November 2023 Further reading editMedia One Child Nation Exposes the Tragic Consequences of Chinese Population Control Reason TV 2019 08 16 External links editOne Child Nation at IMDb nbsp One Child Nation at Rotten Tomatoes nbsp One 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