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  1. Snow Flower and the Secret Fan

    Snow Flower and the Secret Fan

    PG-132011 · Historical drama · 1h 43m

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      • Snow Flower and the Secret Fan is a delicate, if sometimes disturbing, portrait of the enduring relationships that can bond women together over time and experience. Though filled with exotic Eastern traditions and locales, the tale of female friendship is something everyone can appreciate in this introspective and perhaps overly somber drama.
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  2. Jul 20, 2011 · It is at the heart of Lisa See's period best-seller Snow Flower and the Secret Fan, and has inspired a film that carries the concept into the present day. The Chinese, who have been innovators in so many areas, are now revealed to have formalized the BFF relationship as long ago as 1839.

  3. Jul 14, 2011 · At once preposterously genteel and sadistic, “Snow Flower and the Secret Fan,” adapted from the Lisa See novel, turns on two sets of female friends, the first in early-19th-century China,...

    • Wayne Wang
  4. Jul 15, 2011 · Wayne Wang's arthouse drama Snow Flower and the Secret Fan (2011) is a lovely melodrama about sisterhood empowering two women to survive great pain.

    • (90)
    • Wayne Wang
    • PG-13
    • Jun Ji-Hyun
  5. Snow Flower and the Secret Fan is a multigenerational, pan-language film, about the potential depth of a relationship between two women. Full Review | Mar 24, 2021

  6. Disappointing literary adaptation has some heavy themes. Read Common Sense Media's Snow Flower and the Secret Fan review, age rating, and parents guide.

    • Fox Searchlight
    • Wayne Wang
  7. Jul 13, 2011 · Snow Flower and the Secret Fan: Film Review. The film, produced by Wendi Murdoch and Florence Sloan, demonstrates that Wayne Wang remains one of the world’s best directors of women.

  8. Jun 24, 2011 · In 19th-century China, seven year old girls Snow Flower and Lily are matched as laotong - or "old sames" - bound together for eternity. Isolated by their families, they furtively communicate by taking turns writing in a secret language, nu shu, between the folds of a white silk fan.

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