DVDs spotlight women coping with extraordinary times

Two intriguing movies about women in extraordinary times are now out on DVD. Lou Ye's "Summer Palace" (Palm Pictures, $24.99, not rated) offers an unprecedented look at alienated Chinese college students during the turbulent late 1980s.The film's main protagonist, Yu Hong (Hao Lei), leaves her village near the North Korean border to attend prestigious Beijing University. There she experiments with both sexual freedom and political freedom, as Yu and her friends join the massive student demonstrations for democracy that culminated in a government crackdown at Tiananmen Square in 1989.But when Yu's lover, Zhou Wei (Guo Xiaodong), is sent to a military camp after the demonstrations are crushed, they part. Yu moves around in China, working at alienating jobs, conducting listless affairs with different men, undergoing an abortion, while Zhou moves to Berlin, joining a small Chinese expatriate community and remaining disillusioned with both his life and his work."Summer Palace" proceeds at a leisurely, studied pace (it's 140 minutes long) as it takes the stories of Yu and Zhou and their existential angst into the 1990s and 2000s. Considering the explosive political backdrop of its crucial scenes in Beijing, the movie is surprisingly devoid of political discussion. This stands in sharp contrast to the explicitness of director Lou's portrayal of sexual relations and his use of narration by Yu to express her inner thoughts.The stunningly beautiful Hao Lei gives a memorable performance as Yu, capturing her inner conflicts and outward moodiness, and her difficulty in finding herself in a rapidly changing society."Summer Palace's" mix of graphic sexuality and political dissent proved to be too much for China's authoritarian regime. As is explained in a short DVD documentary, "Chinese Censorship," after the film was shown at the 2006 Cannes Film Festival in France, the Chinese Film Bureau and the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television barred the movie from being released in China. Furthermore, director Lou and producer Nai An were banned from all filmmaking activities for five years.The movie, which had a limited run in 2007 in a handful of U.S. cities, has still never been shown in China. X...X...XEnglish actress Victoria Wood has had a powerful response to the lack of good roles for middle-aged actresses (she is 54): She writes good scripts for herself. That's produced three hit TV series for Wood in Britain during the 1980s, '90s and this decade: "Victoria Wood: As Seen on TV," "Victoria Wood" and "Dinnerladies."In "Housewife, 49," an award-winning British television drama from 2006 (Acorn Media Group, $24.99, not rated), Wood stars as a housewife named Nella Last who begins writing a diary as part of a government "Mass Observation" project to boost morale on the homefront during World War II.The story of "Housewife, 49" is about the transformation of a timid housewife who has been bullied and denigrated for years by her cold fish of a husband (David Threlfall), showing a more vital side only in the presence of one of her sons and his friends. Against the wishes of her husband, Nella begins doing volunteer work for the war effort. This not only gives her a sense of purpose that had been missing in her life, it also reveals her organizational and management skills that had previously been hidden. Nella's home life and volunteer work are set amid the difficult life faced by Britons during the war -- with terror bombings by the Germans, constant news (or lack of news) about loves ones and friends killed in fighting, food shortages and other hardships becoming everyday facts of life. It takes a strong person to withstand all of this -- something Nella was not in 1939, when the movie begins, but has become by the time the war ends. "Housewife, 49" won the BAFTA (British Emmy Awards) Award in 2007 for best drama, and Wood won for best actress.(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, www.scrippsnews.com.)