With the old-fashioned Western having long since ridden off into the proverbial sunset a new day is at last dawning on the genre in the east, and films as diverse as The Rover, A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night and Theeb have wasted little time in exploring this fruitful new frontier. Now there’s another stranger in town, with Zhang Yang transplanting the familiar tropes to Tibet where he lets them intermingle with far less familiar traditions, in cinematic terms at least. Despite the director’s Chinese nationality, which in some quarters might be cause for some controversy amid cries of cultural appropriation, Soul on a String feels richly textured and credibly drawn. It is, after all, co-written by Tibet-born Tashi Dawa and performed entirely in Tibetan.
Soul on a String follows vagrant renegade Tabei (Kimba) on a redemptive pilgrimage to Palm Print Mountain, on a sacred quest to restore a religious relic to its rightful place and atone for the sins of his fathers in the process — along with a fair few of his own as well. He is called to action following a fatal lightening strike and a fateful resurrection at the hands of a sympathetic monk. Although short on friends he is long on followers, none of whom are particularly welcome in his company: the fellowship of the stone, as it were, includes Chung (Quni Ciren), a woman looking to escape her solitary life; Gedan (Siano Dudiom Zahi), a man whose motives remain a mystery; and Pu (Yizi Danzeng), a diminutive mute who bears a striking resemblance to Kubo and the Two Strings.
Yang weaves an expansive and elaborate yarn, however, and in a parallel narrative a pair of vengeful brothers seek revenge on the man who killed their father: none other than Tabei himself. Of the two, Guori (Zerong Dages) is the least forgiving, and cuts a swathe through the vicinity dispatching any man unfortunate enough to share his nemesis’ name. Kodi (Lei Chen), on the other hand, fears for the future of his own family should karma inevitably come calling, and seeks to curb his brother’s blood-lust before it’s too late while still doing what he can to avenge his father’s death. Another figure, Zandui (Solange Nima), bears witness from afar, his faithful dog at his side, providing the film’s narration as he watches the action unfold.
Not that the film’s soul is left to dangle on a simple, threadbare string, with delightful characters and a disarming sense of humour lending the film a far more informal air than its subject matter and thematic overtones might imply. Yang’s mastery of tone allows him to segue seamlessly from moments of heartfelt pathos and catharsis, particularly between the two brothers in their spiritual opposition, to the broadest slapstick and most flippant pratfalls at just about every character’s expense. He uses the same tricks of misdirection and revelation to further the main plot too, at one point skilfully introducing an apparently random pair of characters with a hilarious reversal involving Zandui, only to later reveal their narrative importance to genuinely stunning effect.
A thoughtful and philosophical adventure feature with a surprising sardonic streak, Soul on a String achieves an impressive balance between Eastern teachings and Western tropes – a veritable middle way, the same nirvana after which Yang’s characters each aspire.