Mistress Dispeller” is a fascinating and sometimes uneasy documentary that follows a Chinese wife who hires a professional “mistress dispeller” (basically a breakup expert) to secretly end her husband’s affair and save their marriage.

Director Elizabeth Lo films it like a real-life drama: beautiful shots of China, a great soundtrack, and incredibly raw, honest conversations between the wife, the husband, and the mistress. You laugh at some moments (the dispeller, Miss Wang, is almost scarily good at predicting how people will react), and you feel heartbroken in others. It’s funny, sad, and thought-provoking all at once.
At the same time, the film stirs up big questions. Some viewers (especially those from China) feel it turns real people’s pain into entertainment for outsiders, stripping away cultural context and raising serious issues about privacy and consent. Since the movie can’t be shown in China, the family is protected from public exposure, but that also highlights how their very personal story has become a spectacle abroad.
In the end, it’s a powerful look at love, betrayal, class, and marriage in today’s China—no clear heroes or villains, just complicated humans trying to figure things out. It’s definitely memorable, even if it leaves you torn between admiration for its honesty and discomfort about whether this story should have been told this way.
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