Life on a String () is a 1991 Chinese film by acclaimed film director Chen Kaige. Made before his international breakthrough Farewell, My Concubine, Life on a String is a more intimate and philosophical affair, telling the story of a blind sanxian player and his young disciple. The film was based on the novel Life on a String (å½èÂ¥ç´弦) by Shi Tiesheng. The film was entered into the 1991 Cannes Film Festival.
In the vast, desolate mountains of northwest China, an elderly blind musician known as Shenshen has spent sixty years wandering village to village, playing his three-stringed lute and telling stories, sustained by his late master's promise: inside the instrument's body lies a prescription that will restore his sight once he has snapped a thousand strings. He takes on a young blind apprentice named Shitou, passing on the same hope. When they arrive in a remote village plagued by clan feuds, Shitou falls deeply in love with a local girl, Lanxiu, leading to heartbreak and violence that shakes his faith in the distant dream of sight.
As Shenshen finally breaks his thousandth string and discovers the "prescription" is nothing but a blank sheet of paperâÂÂa deliberate lie to give life tension and purposeâÂÂhe confronts the emptiness yet chooses to perpetuate the illusion by sealing the same blank paper into Shitou's instrument, urging him to snap even more strings. The film ends with the master and apprentice continuing their endless journey across the barren landscape, embodying the bittersweet truth that life's meaning lies not in unreachable destinations, but in the taut, resonant strings of hope that keep one moving forward.