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.

Suriv, ve’!

Got back from Seoul three days ago.
I found a desert here at Fudan campus.
My dorm is silent, everyone left.
It’s holiday time here in China.

The streets around my uni are striking empty.
You can feel the virus corroding people’s mind before attacking their bodies.

I see too much hysteria.
One should simply follow basic hygenic norms,
Avoiding crowded places and wearing masks when outside.
And then wait and see how all of this will evolve.

PS Shanghai is even gloomier than Paris in winter

grey clouds
rain
smog
New Trinity

ten days in Shanghai: random thoughts.

The sky is never blue here,
it can be the rain
or the smog,
but you can’t have a clear sky.

Same thing when the sun goes down
millions of lights brighten the dark night
and you can’t see the stars.

Someone opens a egg on a bike handlebar
someone else spits across the street
and a father keeps an eye on his daughter
who’s peeing on the border of the street.

I still need time to assimilate everything
I’m in a megacity with the same extension of Liguria
and half the population of my country, Italy!

The university campus is huuuuge
I bought a bike on Taobao
it’s full of cats, meowww
and thank God of trees, too.

博学而笃志,切问而近思 is my motto now
which means “to learn extensively and adhere to aspirations,
to inquire earnestly and reflect with self-application”.

OPPO Reno #techtips

Who knows me is quite familiar with the fact that I rarely use a smartphone for more than 6 straight months; over the years I tried many devices, both from Android and iOS ecosystems (and Windows Mobile, until it lasted), but I think I finally get my hands on a true champion: the OPPO Reno.

A little bit of history: OPPO is a Chinese brand created in 2004 and, after a period of growth and consolidation in the home market, it has decided to storm the Western digital world with excellent products at a competitive price point. After the first wave of devices in 2018 (supported by a solid ad campaign) and the introduction of the revolutionary Find X, in 2019 Oppo launched its Reno series: the standard version, the Z, the 10x zoom and a 5G version. The focus is here is on the first one of this list, but if you’d like to have impressions and opinions on the others, please leave a comment below.

Let’s dive into the Reno’s spec sheet:

  • Qualcomm Snapdragon 710 processor (10nm chipset)
  • 6.4″ Full HD+ (1080×2340 pixels) AMOLED display (93% screen-to-body ratio)
  • 6GB RAM DDR4X
  • 256GB UFS 2.1 storage
  • 48 megapixels main camera, f/1.7 + 5 megapixels depth sensor f/2.4+ dual tone flash LED
  • Motorized selfie camera, 16 megapixels f/2.0
  • 3765mAh battery with VOOC recharge technology
  • Optical, under glass fingerprint scanner + 2D facial recognition
  • Dual-SIM tray, 4G+ enabled
  • 2.0 USB-C port + 3.5mm headphone jack

I know, for those of you who aren’t tech enthusiasts these numbers and specs don’t mean so much. So let me analyse for you one category after the other, in order to give you a comprehensive picture of how good this Reno is.

Display and unlocks methods

The bezel-less screen is, in one word, gorgeous. It’s super immersive, with absolute blacks, good colour reproduction, vision angles and crispiness; it doesn’t reach the quality of Samsung’s Super AMOLED panels, but it’s surely among the best on the market. Visibility under direct sunlight is excellent, and you can wear your preferred sunglasses without problems: polarization isn’t a problem here.

You can unlock the Reno with the fingerprint scanner, which is really really fast and reliable although it’s an optical one (a technology not advanced as the ultrasonic implementation of other flagship devices like the new Samsung Note 10), or blinking to the pop-up camera through the 2D face recognition: I surely prefer the first option, given the latency of the camera mechanism. Nonetheless, watching that metallic shark fin going up and down is a pure moment of tech estasy…

Camera(s) and audio quality

The main camera produces great and harmonious shots. I like in particular the Dazzle Colour option: in short, with a tap you can choose whether or not to have hyper-saturated photos, an option that other manufacturers don’t offer. In addition, HDR (which can be triggered automatically) works excellently.

A portrait mode is present, too, thanks to the secondary 5 megapixels sensor: the results are good, but not at the level of Google Camera’s smartphones. Something quite astonishing is on the other hand what OPPO calls Ultra Night Mode 2.0: in low light situations the camera takes five shots, one right after the other, and combines them to extrapolate incredible details and plenty of light, as this example demonstrates:

Day-to-day usability

A 6.4″ smartphone, three or four years ago, would have been labelled as “phablet”: today it’s the normality, and we have become used to this sizes. It must be said that these 6.4″ have a 19.5/9 aspect ratio: this means that the Reno is quite narrow and tall, thus increasing the ergonomics. The back cover is made of polished glass and transmit a good sense of grip, obviously with a case this improves a lot; but trust me that you’ll struggle to cover this sexy back with some boring plastic…

Reception, both under 4G or WiFi, is great. The best adjective to describe the general performance is fluid: the system never stutters even when under full load, you’ll always be able to multitask between the apps without a forced closing. 6GB of RAM and UFS 2.1 memories do a great job here, you can’t feel a substantial difference with other flagship phones.

The only, truly annoying thing of this smartphone is the lack of a LED light, absolutely necessary to rapidly check the notifications, further amplified by the poor Always-On Display implementation by OPPO: you can only see the clock, the battery percentage and an icon for few apps (SMS, phone, WeChat).

Battery life

It’s damn good. 3765mAh isn’t the best-in-class nominal capacity, with competitors going beyond the 4000mAh landmark, but ColorOS (the Android skin made by OPPO) isn’t excessively energy-consuming. Power savers are present (in two flavours, a normal one and a Super High Power Efficiency, resembling Sony’s Super Stamina mode), but I never used them in my experience.

Final words: I really, really recommend this Reno. At 499€, the initial price set by OPPO, maybe you can find better alternatives; but at 389€ (unlocked, at Amazon) it becomes a clear contender of the “best buy prize” for this price range (alongside the Xiaomi Mi9T and the Redmi K20 Pro). I bought it with the Italian carrier TIM at 5€x30 months + 49€ upfront: 199€ spread over this period of time are an incredible deal for this amazing product.

Brava, OPPO!