Review: One Child Nation

I stumbled across this documentary on Amazon Prime Video, and I’m so grateful for having done so. I have a deep passion for any socio-political question concerning China and surely the One Child Policy (OCP hereafter) has caught my attention since the first time I heard about it. During the semester I spent at Fudan University (should have been two… thanks Covid -.-) I had the chance to be part of the “China Social Security” course, and the OCP was a recurring element of the various lessons. For those who don’t know, the OCP was a succession of birth control policies to which the Chinese government had subjected its citizens over a period ranging from 1979 to 2013.

One Child Nation is directed by Nanfu Wang, and I really liked her approach: intense, rough, tragically realistic. The documentary begins with her recalling the memory of her homeland, through the eyes and voices of her relatives. There is no abrupt political condemnation, but rather there is an intimate narrative of one’s personal, painful experience, as Nanfu Wang and Jialing Zhang (the co-director) were born during the application of the OCP. However, despite this condition, the two artists knew very little of the pain that was hidden behind the silence of millions of mothers of that time: they families were part of privileged rural ones and, precisely for this reason, they had never experienced all that suffering firsthand.

There is a clear and intimate personal research in this movie. Before being a fully-fledged political accusation, Wang and Zhang’s documentary is a family tale that has subsequently turned into a choral narrative of one of the biggest and most cruel social experiments ever conceived. The main narrative tool used consists of interviews, portraying a large number of individuals who had directly experienced the tragedy of the OCP. Notably, the interviewees are only common people and no political legislators: this is unfortunate but obvious… I think no explanation is needed here.

In One Child Nation, there is no room for any form of censorship. Hollow faces, framed by wrinkles, individuals who narrate the crimes they had witnessed or perpetrated in first person – for example, a former midwife admits to having forced mothers to abortions, or a former family “planner” claims to have no remorse and to be firmly convinced of the rightfulness of her actions. Why, after all, can’t we say that the OCP has helped China improving its overall social structure to become the world power we know today? Is it ethically correct to sacrifice the lives of millions of children for the higher good? Citizens’ welfare has increased, but was it really worth it? Wang is not afraid to ask uncomfortable, at times contradictory questions: her investigation is intended to shed light on the truth, not to look for common sense. She dedicates no space to trivial details.

One Child Nation emerges, therefore, as a documentary in which lights and shadows are intertwined, even indistinguishable, in which the concept of legality seems to waver and no clear definition can be given. The documentary highlights all the tortures, forced abortions and sterilizations, children trafficking and neglect, but not only: the movie continues depicting the alleged silver linings advocated by family planning supporters. Nanfu Wang is not afraid to get naked, telling a truth – the truth about her – that could be despised by many. She is not afraid of being controversial, insecure, complex, human.

One Child Nation has received many enthusiastic reviews worldwide and it was nominated for the Gotham Independent Film Award for Best Documentary. Personally, I cannot but recommend it to everyone.

Purchased: Dell S3221QS

HOW I GOT IT Since July 2020 I’ve used a 24 inches curved monitor from Samsung: 1080p resolution, VA panel, a fairly standard solution at a reasonable cost (≈ 110€). I wasn’t disappointed with it, at all, but with some cash scraped together thanks to a couple of tech arbitrages (if you know me well, you are accustomed to my buy-and-sell spirit), I decided to invest in a new, better, bigger monitor.

My desk has a shelf 45 centimeters above it. The space for a PC monitor is therefore limited, and my first idea for the new purchase was directed towards a 21:9 ultra wide monitor: I do not play video games, and the increased horizontal real estate would have been much welcomed to improve my daily workflow. I had two choices regarding sizes: 29″ or 34″ (roughly corresponding to 24″ and 27″ in 16:9). After a detailed online research, I discovered that I had to stick with the former size, as 34″ monitors below 45cm in height are pretty rare.

At this point, however, I started considering the impact that an ultra wide screen would have been on my neck+shoulder pain that, unfortunately, has been with me for a long time. Turning the head right and left to reach the corners of the monitor would have been counterproductive to my initial intention of enhancing my desk setup. So, I concluded that I needed a standard 16:9 monitor, most likely a 27 inches one: after some time I shortlisted two models but miraculously (you’ll read why I use this adverb) I came across the main character of this post: the Dell S3221QS.

Screen dimensions31.5 inches (80 cm), curved (1800R)
Resolution and refresh rate4K (3840×2160 pixels)
Refresh rate60 Hz
Screen technologyVA, supports HDR
Contrast ratio3000:1
Response time8-5-4 ms
Max brightness300 cd/m²
Interface2 x HDMI 2.0, 1 x DisplayPort 1.2, 2 x USB 3.0
Audio2 x 5 W speakers, audio line-out
Adjustable standYes (tilt, height)
Physical dimensions (LxWxH)70.92 cm x 20.7 cm x 44.81 cm
Notable featuresAMD FreeSync, VESA 100X100 cm, USB hub
Price (paid)420€ (320€)
Main technical characteristics

MY REVIEW As you can see from the above specs, this Dell juuuuust fits on my desk, a couple of mm shy of the shelf. Gaudemus igitur! I can’t deny how nervous I was when I unboxed and placed it for the first time, the monitor really seems merging itself with the library I have in front of me… Anyway, once everything was set in terms of cables and connections, I turned it on and this represents quite faithfully my reaction when I first opened a 4K video on YouTube:

It. Is. Gorgeous. The sense of immersion given by the combo curved display + large panel + slim bezels is unique, and the various settings let you tweak the image quality in so many ways that I still have to find them all. The HDR isn’t that effective, to be honest, but at this price point it is understandable. I tried connecting both my work (Lenovo ThinkPad L390, through its docking station) and personal (Apple MacBook Air M1) laptops, and they work well. Not flawlessly, as I encountered some obstacles with my MacBook, but still the experience has been good so far.

The real deal for me, apart from the great image quality, is how incredibly productive this monitor is. I can place four windows at once (for instance Teams, Outlook, PowerPoint and Excel), and everything is under control effortlessly. I will experiment other solutions, like Edge on 2/3 of the screen and Outlook and the other 1/3, but I am confident to say that this Dell is a true revolution for my day-to-day activities in front of a PC.

Another point worth mentioning is the PiP/PbP mode: when the ThinkPad and the MacBook are connected at the same time, turning on this function enables me to have one desktop inside the other (PiP, Picture-in-Picture) or one next to the other (PbP, Picture-by-Picture). These are particularly useful arrangements as they allow me to run personal contents in a smaller screen (still clocking a nice 1080p) while working on the bigger area, for example.

It’s less than a week that I have this beast on my desk, so these are more first impressions than a proper full review. Anyway, I’m super super happy about this purchase I made; more so as it is a sort of “first (true) contract gift” that I made to myself 😎

short review of Coldplay’s new album – Everyday Life

Coldplay aren’t back.

This new album doesn’t share much (I would say, anything) with their past productions.

There’s nothing in common with their holy triptych – Parachutes, A Rush of Blood to the Head, X&Y – and those melodies capable of attracting millions of fans. But that’s a good sign: never try to replicate such a success.

Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friend was a first moment of experimentation for the band. Here in Everyday Life that tendency has been pushed even further, though I must admit I don’t feel the same balanced combinations of sounds, rhythms and themes. It’s not a bad thing per se, it’s just different, and possibly something to praise: courage should always be incentivized, especially when it leads to a good product as Everyday Life is.

I don’t wanna use too much space to discuss about the last three Coldplay’s albums – Mylo Xyloto, Ghost Stories, A Head Full of Dreams. In my opinion there’s been a steady decline in terms of quality across them: let’s say I’m just happy to hear that finally Chris Martin and co. succeded in recording something if not special, at least deserving everyone’s attention.

Syntethic score after a first full listening session: 7.

Coldplay aren’t back, and that’s good.