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This beguiling tale of a middle-aged man who’s lost his bearings doubles as a charming meditation on the frayed bonds of family.

Families can be fraught, but for fortysomething food critic Gu Wentong, the topic is particularly spicy. Living in disarray, he ponders what life might have been like if he’d kept in touch with his estranged father, who was banished from the house when he was a child. For his part, Wentong is divorced, so his own daughter is under the care of his withering sister. But when word comes that Dad may be living in the seaside town of Beidaihe, a healing opportunity appears – especially if Wentong can channel the spontaneity of his younger photographer colleague.

This lilting gem from Chinese-Korean novelist turned filmmaker Zhang Lu (A Quiet Dream, MIFF 2017) debuted in competition at the 2023 Berlinale. It deftly folds a complicated history into a deceptively simple tale of lost souls making their way back to the centre, beginning at the 13th-century Buddhist temple in Beijing’s Xicheng district – which, intriguingly, seems to cast no shadow – that gives this film its title. There’s a hint of Ryūsuke Hamaguchi’s Drive My Car (MIFF 2021) to this wryly sweet, slow-burn beauty.

“A perfectly paced and intricately structured film, The Shadowless Tower pulls off the intoxicating trick of making the world feel smaller and more intimate than it first appears.” – Little White Lies

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Please note: The Thursday 17 August session can be booked as a Food & Film experience. Find out more here.