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critic Caught by the Tides (2024)

Caught by the Tides Review: Jia Zhangke's Memory Palace of a Changing China

★★★★½ 4.5/5

Verdict

Essential viewing for anyone who believes cinema can hold time.

Is Caught by the Tides good?

Yes — critics are far more enthusiastic (98% Critic Score, 88 Metascore) than general audiences (70% Audience Score), landing at a 79% Celluloid Score overall. Jia Zhangke assembles footage he shot across two decades into a single film, and the result feels less like a plot than a life accumulating in real time.

What is Caught by the Tides about?

A fragile romance between Qiao Qiao (Tao Zhao) and Guo Bin (Zhubin Li) threads through two decades of China’s economic upheaval and mass migration. Because the footage genuinely spans years, Zhao’s performance becomes something closer to a documented life than conventional acting — her presence ages alongside the country around her.

Should you watch Caught by the Tides?

If you’re drawn to patient, durational cinema, absolutely — but know the 28-point critic/audience gap is real. The film asks you to feel duration rather than consume story beats, which is precisely what makes it rewarding for some viewers and frustrating for others.

How does Caught by the Tides compare to Ash Is Purest White?

It’s the deepening of a project Jia has been building for years — where Ash Is Purest White told one relationship across changing China, this film literalizes that idea by using real archival footage rather than a reconstructed timeline. It’s less a sequel than an elegy for his own body of work.