Friday, September 26, 2008

Scorching Sun, Fierce Winds, Wild Fire

Scorching Sun, Fierce Winds, Wild Fire aka ''Any Which Way You Punch'' is a 1978 Taiwanese film, released by Ocean Shore, starring Angela Mao, Dorian Tan, Chang Yi, and Lo Lieh.

Plot



''Scorching Sun, Fierce Wind, Wild Fire'' is a story about a search for the second half of a treasure map, but it's conveniently forgotten at various points. Angela Mao plays the daughter of a warlord and has a secret identity as the masked freedom fighter Violet, who rides the country righting wrongs and organizing rebels. Tien Peng plays a mysterious stranger who comes to town looking for the other half of the map. Lo Lieh and Tan Tao Liang play prison inmates who escape and end up actually being ex-comrades with Tien Ping and assisting he and Violet in apprehending Master Wu , the security chief who does most of the fighting for the warlord. Master Wu turns traitor in order to get the map.

Cast


* Angela Mao
* Dorian Tan
* Lo Lieh
* Chang Yi

School Days (movie)

School Days is a / directed by Chu Yin-Ping. It is a collaboration between Hong Kong and Taiwan. It also called Jiao Yuan Gan Si Dui

Plot


A rich business man's son Xiao Zi goes to a private high school and is immediately accosted by a small gang who says he has to pay up "protection" money. Xiao Zi has no money himself and so conflict. He always manages to escape their grasps, the popular student who name is princess helps him. A few days after, enters a new student, "Eagle", who takes the kid under his wing. Eagle is tough and can defend himself, but he won't fight anyone because of his inner demons and troubled past.

Casts


* Takeshi Kaneshiro as eagle
* Ruby Lin as princess
* Jimmy Lin as Xiao Zi

Rebels of the Neon God

Rebels of the Neon God is a Taiwanese film by Tsai Ming-liang. It is his first full-length film. It tells two stories of Taipei youth. One details alienated buxiban student Hsiao Kang and his troubled interactions with his family. The other shows two petty hoods, Ah Tze and Ah Bing, along with Ah Kuei, Tze's erstwhile girlfriend. An idle act of violence brings the two groups into collision, and an act of revenge at the end completes the circle. It is a story of troubled youth, dissatisfaction, and the alienating effect of urban life.

Much of ''Rebels of the Neon God'' is filmed in various arcades and malls in Taipei and on the streets of the city with hand-held cameras. It is filmed in a much more naturalistic manner than some of Tsai's later work.

It won Golden Horse Awards for Best Original Score and the Prize of the City of Torino for Best Film at the Torino International Festival of Young Cinema.

Title


The Taiwanese title refers to Nezha, a powerful child god in Chinese classical mythology who was born into a human family. Nezha is impulsive and disobedient. He tries to kill his father, but is brought under control when a Taoist immortal gives the father a miniature pagoda that enables him to control his rebellious son. This resonates in the film a number of ways: Lee's mother believes that he is Nezha reincarnated, and Tze and Bing try to pawn off some stolen goods to an arcade proprieter named Nezha. Before the pawning of the stolen goods, Lee vandalizes Tze's motorcycle, including graffiti stating "Here is Nezha."

One Stone Two Birds

One Stone Two Birds is a directed by Chu Yin-Ping.

Plot


During the reign of Emperor Jia Jing of the Ming Dynasty, the evil court official Yan Song relies on the emperor favoritism towards him, becoming overbearing and domineering. An honest official Zhang Ying Long impeaches Yan Song w/ a "Ten Cimes Five Deceits" against him. But instead he gets flogged 30 times, and banished to a far off frontier Guizhou.

Zhang Ying Long's remonstration won the hearts of the common people, on the day of his banishment thousands of people turned out to see him off. At the sight of this, Yan Sung knows that if he does not kill off Zhang Ying Long, he will be unable to deter other court officials. Thereupon, he arranges for assassins to kill Zhang Ying Long during the journey.

Guizhou, b/w the high mountain ridge lies a small relay station. Because this place is far off and also not deemed an important area by the government, therefore the relay station has become run-downed. The relay station is managed by two young people, one is named Shi Yi Pao, the other Bu De Liao, and also Zeng Wu Liao. Shi Yi Pao seems like a person who feels that he never gets enough sleep, and has a look of bewilderment on him everyday. Bu De Liao and Ceng Wu Liao both are diligent, but they are kind of stupid looking. These three people have already spent six useless years in this boring place.

Cast


* Ruby Lin as 馨馨
* Eric Tsang as 老李
* Ng Man Tat as 曾武了
* Jacky Wu as 石仪咆
* Xe Cun as 得辽
* Gao Hu as 柳玉树
* Wang Gang as Gui Jian Chou
* Chen Rong as 萧贯虹

My Football Summer

My Football Summer is a 2006 documentary film directed by Yang Li-chou and Chang Rong-ji about a group of young football players in pursuit of a dream.

Origin


In the beginning of 2006, Yang was commissioned by Taiwan to make a 5-minute long commercial for the incoming 2006 FIFA World Cup. During the filming, Yang felt the story was too touching to be fulfilled by only four short videos, and therefore he decided to extend the project into a feature-length documentary and asked his student and cameraman, Chang, to be the co-director.

Plot


In Hualien, players of Mei Lun Junior High School football team are preparing for the upcoming , which is one of the major youth football competitions in Taiwan. It is the last, and the most important, game in their three years of junior-high-school life. They are eager to win, not only because they are the defending champion, but also they want to devote the title to their beloved coach, Wu Hsiao-yin, as his wedding gift.

Things go well in the beginning. They beat every team they encounter and eventually reach the final, in which they meet their major contender, A Lien Junior High School of Kaohsiung County. They make 2-2 at the full time whistle, and, sadly, lose the game in the penalty shootout.

The life keeps going on. After graduation, some players enter National Hualien Senior High School, whereas the others enter Hualien Vocational High School of Agriculture. They meet each other again in a friendly match between the two school teams, but they are now competitors.

Multimedia


Trailers:
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Nike commercials:
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Honors


* 2006 for Best Documentary

Follow-up


* In November 2006, gained victory over , which consisted of many players from A Lien Junior High School, in the final of men's under-17 group of .

March of Happiness

March of Happiness is a film directed by Lin Cheng-sheng. It tells the story of a teenage romance set against the backdrop of the and the 228 Incident. The film was Taiwan's official at the 72nd Academy Awards, but did not manage to receive a nomination.

Mahjong (1996 film)

Mahjong is a film written and directed by Edward Yang. The film stars Chang Kuo-shu, Chang Chen, Nick Erickson and Virginie Ledoyen.

Cast and roles


*Tang Congsheng as Red Fish
*Wu Nien-Jen as the Older Mobster
*Elaine Jin as Chen's Wife
*Virginie Ledoyen as Marthe
*Carrie Ng as Angela
*Ko Yu-lun as Lun-lun
*Chang Chen as Hong Kong
*Chang Kuo-Shu as Winston Chen
*Nick Erickson as Markus

Lust, Caution (film)

Lust, Caution Wong Chia Chi walking past dead refugees in street, 2) Stabbing scene cut to only one knife stab, 3) Of the five sex scenes , the second one with student and the third with Mr. Yee, 4) Nude shot of Wong Chia Chi at window, 5) Wong Chia Chi on bed after first sex scene with Mr. Yee, 6) Dialogue modified in diamond ring scene so that Wong Chia Chi did not betray by warning Mr. Yee.

Origin


The film was coproduced by the companies Focus Features and River Road Productions, and companies Shanghai Film Group Corporation and Haishang Films and the Taiwanese Hai Sheng Film Production Company. The director is Ang Lee, who is a naturalized US citizen, and the actors/actresses are from mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan as well as the United States. It was shot in Shanghai, the neighboring province of Zhejiang, Hong Kong , and some locations in Ipoh, Malaysia disguised as 1930/40's Hong Kong.

Originally, the movie's country was identified as 'China-USA' by the organizers of the Venice Film Festival, but after a complaint from Ang Lee's office, it was changed to 'Taiwan'. However, a few days later, the Venice Film Festival changed the film to "USA-China-Taiwan, China" on its official schedule. When the movie premiered at the event, Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council protested the Venice event's use of "Taiwan, China" to identify movies from the island and blamed China for the move.

After the premiere of the movie, Taiwan submitted the film as its best foreign film Oscar entry. However, Oscars asked Taiwan to withdraw the film because some key crew members were not locals. Oscars spokeswoman Teni Melidonian said in an e-mail organizers refused to accept the movie because "an insufficient number of Taiwanese participated in the production of the film," violating a rule that requires foreign countries to certify their locals "exercised artistic control" over their submission.

Defamation


On September 13, 2007, an elderly lady Zheng Tianru staged a press conference in Los Angeles, claiming that the movie was about real-life events that happened in World War II, and wrongfully portrayed her older sister, Zheng Pingru, as a promiscuous secret agent who seduced and eventually fell in love with the assassination target Ding Mocun . Taiwan's investigation bureau confirmed that Zheng Pingru failed to kill Ding Mocun because her gun jammed, rather than developing a romantic relationship with the assassin's target. Director Ang Lee maintains that Eileen Chang wrote the original short story about herself, not about a real historical event.

Critical reception


As of January 17, 2008 on the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, 70% of all critics gave the film positive reviews, while scoring 54% among RottenTomatoes-designated "Top Critics." On Metacritic, the film had an average score of 61 out of 100, based on 34 reviews.

Jack Mathews of the ''New York Daily News'' named it the 5th best film of 2007. Kenneth Turan of the ''Los Angeles Times'' named it the 6th best film of 2007.) that the Hong Kong sequences in the film set in the late 1930s include "London taxis" of two types that were only manufactured onwards from 1948 and 1958 respectively.

Box office


''Lust, Caution'' was produced on a budget of approximately $15 million.

In Hong Kong, where it played in its full, uncut version, ''Lust, Caution'' grossed $6,249,342 USD despite being saddled with a restrictive "Category III" rating . It was the territory's biggest-grossing Chinese language film of the year, and third biggest overall .

The film was also a huge success in China, despite playing only in a heavily-edited version. It grossed $17,109,185 USD, making it the country's sixth highest-grossing film of 2007 and third highest-grossing domestic production.

In North America, the NC-17 rating which ''Lust, Caution'' received is traditionally perceived as a box office "kiss-of-death". In its opening weekend in one US theatre, it grossed an excellent $63,918. Never playing at more than 143 theatres in its entire US run, it eventually grossed $4,604,982.

Worldwide, ''Lust Caution'' grossed $64,574,876.

This film has generated more than $24 million from its DVD Sales and Rentals in the United States, an impressive result for a film that only grossed $4.6 million in limited theatrical release in the United States.

Etymology


* In the Shanghainese dialect, the words "lust" and "lost" are homophones.
* The translation of the Chinese title 色、戒 as "Lust, Caution" loses the pun it has in Chinese. The first character 色 can mean "color", second character 戒 can mean "ring", so the first and more apparent meaning of the title is "The Color Ring", referring to the precious color-diamond ring that at the last moment doomed the heroine's mission. 色 can also mean "lust", and in Chinese more specifically referring to sexual desire. In its other meaning, the second character 戒 is closer to "warning" or even "renunciation" than "caution". So, the second and more implicit meaning of the title is close to the English "Lust, Caution".

Love of May

Love of May is a directed by Hsu Hsiao-ming and stars Wilson Chen and Liu Yifei.

Cast


* Wilson Chen
* Liu Yifei
* Feng Tian

List of Taiwanese films

This is a list of films produced in Taiwan or the Republic of China:
For an A-Z see :Category:Taiwanese films

1920s





1930s





1940s





1950s





1960s





1970s





1980s





1990s





2000s

Legend of the Sacred Stone

Legend of the Sacred Stone is a 2000 film created by Chris Huang that reflects the style of budaixi within the country of Taiwan. It is part of the .

Plot



Throughout the storyline within this movie film, 400 years within the past is where it is meant to be taking place. The story begins when a man by the name of Mo Kuei threatens the people to the extent that he will destroy all of Wulin, which had been the forest of residence for the warriors of Wulin. A certain sage by the name of Su Huan-jen had responded to this conflict by summoning three specific warriors from different schools of martial arts to assist him. These three warriors would then wait within ambush for Mo Kuei to gather his spiritual energy amongst the summit of the mountain. The story continues onward in which Lord Jian almost becomes sealed by certain protectors of Wulin. Many conflicts follow this in which Jian loses all of his powers and lusts to find the Sacred Stone to regain his powers.

Character List



''Main characters''

* Su Huan-Jen
* Ao Hsiao Hong-Chen
* Ching Yanz-zi
* Jian Ru-Bing
* Lord Jian

''Other characters''

* Mo-Kui
* Jian Wei
* Jian Wu-Yan
* Jian Jun
* Kwuang Dao
* Hsiao-Chai
* enemy demons

Character Biographies



Su Huan-Jen: The main character within the Legend of the Sacred Stone film. Huan-Jen was regularly referred to as White Lotus through his purity of mind and character. No matter how extreme of circumstances, Huan-Jen will always reflect calmness within his art of the sword and inner mind even when he consists of merely one arm. Huan-Jen is renowned for his excelled abilities with his sword. Huan-Jen also reflects various traits such as being clever within his tactics and rather wise. His ultimate goal is to restore Wulin to its former power even if it costs him his life in the process. Huan-Jen later vows to destroy Lord Jian after he sees his brother dead right before him.

Ao Hsiao Hong-Chen: The primary subordinate character within Legend of the Sacred Stone. Hong-Chen had been an old friend of Lord Jian. The many unforeseen events within his life, such as his friend becoming rather distorted of mind has led for him to have no true desire towards political power. Through this, Hong-Chen has searched for many years towards a more pure way with the world. After some years had passed by, he soon became rather obsessed with spiritual power, and a rather strong sense of justice. However, Hong-Chen can act impulsively at times when his sense of justice is challenged in any type of way. It is noted that Hong-Chen is even a greater swordsman than that of Su Huan-Jen which was proved through a certain serious duel to the death between each other.

Ching Yang-Zi: A very close friend to that of Su Huan-Jen. He is always with Huan-Jen, and they regularly call each other brothers due to their closeness. Yang-Zi possesses a certain unique ability with the harp weapon, in which he can transmit spiritual power and use it as is will within battle. It is also known that Yang-Zi is brave of heart and is a rather noted gentleman. At one time within the story, Yang-Zi attempts to flee with Ru-Bing in hopes of escaping the demon allies of Lord Jian. After Yang-Zi is severely wounded and near death, he had kept continuing to protect Ru-Bing for the sake of his brother. However, after he made a secure rout of escape for Ru-Bing, he would see his last against three specific demons, in which he had violently unleashed his powers amongst the melee. Yang-Zi however was dealt the final slash by the enemy, in which he stood alone with blood rushing forth from his body, never to wake again.

Jian Ru-Bing: A rather beautiful woman who had been well known as the daughter of Lord Jian. Ru-Bing is daily forced to carry around her father's hatred towards their past village. Ru-Bing's actions, which are partially driven through fear, result in her acting in any way that complies with her father. Ru-Bing even went ot the extent as to attempt to retrieve the Sacred Stone from Hell's Valley to restore her father's face, and spiritual power. Ru-Bing is also the secret love of Su Huan-Jen. In the end however, Ru-Bing sadly sacrifices her life to the Sacred Stone so that her father can become restored. This is because the Sacred Stone requires an equal sacrifice to attain a greater goal.

Lord Jian: The primary villain within the Legend of the Sacred Stone, and father of Ru-Bing. Jian had at one time been noted as a kind man of noble descent, even to the extent that he was known as the "Great Protector". Later however, his younger brother would find a certain artifact known as the Sacred Stone, which caused many demons to attack him and to have his whole family slaughtered. This caused for a large distortion within Jian, leading for him to possess an immense blood lust. Jian will stop at nothing to fin the Sacred Stone for revenge, even if it costs him being sealed away or killed. Jian's hatred leads for him to become enemies with the warriors of Wulin, even leading for many to be recruited to act against him. His ultimate goal is to restore his face and attain unlimited power, even if it costs his daughter's death. In the end however, his daughter is sacrificed, and he is finally defeated after a long battle against both Su Huan-Jen and Hsiao Hong-Chen.

Jian Wei: The sworn protector of Lord Jian. Jian Wei had served as Jian's protector even at a young age, and will continue to serve him even if he had became distorted of mind. However, Jian Wei still wishes for Lord Jian to return to his old self and will stop at nothing to see his true master's self again. Later within the story, Jian Wei runs away with Ru-Bing when he acquires the Sacred Stone, as to save Lord Jian from his ambition. Jian later catches up with Jian Wei and slays him without a second thought.

Technique


The techniques used in Legend of the Sacred Stone and the Pili TV series are glove puppetry, CG animation, and wires are sometimes used when characters are fighting to flip them around in the air. Unlike other hand puppets, budaixi puppets have legs.

DVD versions


There are two versions of the film on DVD - the uncut 120-minute version from Taiwan, which has no English subtitles, and the truncated 99-minute version from Japan, with English subtitles. The Japanese DVDs advertise a "129-minute" running time, but this includes the special features.

I Don't Want to Sleep Alone

I Don't Want to Sleep Alone is a 2006 - -drama film written and directed by Tsai Ming-liang. Lee Kang-sheng stars in a dual role as a brain-dead patient being cared for by a young woman , and as a homeless man who is severely beaten by a mob, and then found and cared for by a migrant worker .

Censorship in Malaysia



The Malaysian Censorship Board on 4th March 2007 decided to ban Tsai's latest film shot in Malaysia, ''I Don't Want to Sleep Alone'' based on 18 counts of incidences shown in the film depicting the country "in a bad light" for cultural, ethical and racial reasons. However, they later allowed the film to be screened in the country after Tsai agreed to censor parts of the film according to the requirements of the Censorship Board.

Release



''I Don't Want to Sleep Alone'' was among several films commissioned by Peter Sellars' New Crowned Hope Festival in Vienna in 2006, to commemorate the 250th anniversary of the birth of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

The film had its world premiere on September 4, 2006 at the 64th Venice International Film Festival. It made its North American premiere on September 11 at the 2006 Toronto International Film Festival. It was also screened at the Vancouver International Film Festival, the Pusan International Film Festival, the London Film Festival, the Festival of Three Continents, the London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival the Deauville Asian Film Festival and the Hong Kong International Film Festival.

It opened in general release in Taiwan on March 23, 2007, and after a censorship controversy in Malaysia, a version specially edited by director Tsai Ming-liang opened in on May 17, 2007.

The film had a limited release in New York City on May 9, 2007, and was released in the United Kingdom on November 16, 2007.

Hiroshi Shimizu (director)

was a Japanese film director, known for his silent films with detailed depictions of Japanese society. He was a friend and colleague of Yasujiro Ozu.

His works include:

* ''Beyond the Pass''
* ''Mura no bokujo'' 1924
* ''Undying Pearl''
* ''Mori no kajiya'' 1929
* ''Parents''
* ''Ginga'' 1931
* ''Seven Seas''
* ''Nanatsu no umi: Kohen Teiso-hen'' 1932
* ''Jonetsu: Ra pashion'' 1931
* ''Manshu koshin-kyoku'' 1932
* ''Umi no oja'' 1932
* ''Japanese Girls at the Harbor''
* ''The Boss's Son Goes to College''
* ''Naki nureta haru no onnayo 1933''
* ''Eclipse''
* ''A Hero of Tokyo''
* ''Mr. Thank-you''
* ''Forget Love for Now''
* ''Children of the Wind''
* ''Star Athlete''
* ''Konjiki Yasha 1937''
* ''The Masseurs and a Woman''
* ''Katei nikki 1938''
* ''Four Seasons of Children''
* ''Seoul''
* ''Nobuko ''
* ''Ornamental Hairpin''
* ''Akatsuki no gassho''
* ''Notes of an Itinerant Performer''
* ''The Introspection Tower''
* ''Sayon's Bell''
* ''Victory Song''
* ''Children of the Beehive''
* ''Mr. Shosuke Ohara''
* ''A Mother's Love''
* ''Those later children of the Beehive''
* ''Children and the Great Buddha''
* ''The Shiinomi School''
* ''The Tale of Jir?''
* ''Kiri no oto'' 1956
* ''Dancing Girl''
* ''Image of a Mother''

Help Me Eros

Help Me, Eros is the second film from director Lee Kang-sheng, following his directorial debut in 2003, .

The film centers around the lives of three socially isolated characters - the newly-unemployed Ah Jie , the call center counsellor he depends on for support, Chyi , and one of the team of provocatively dressed girls employed in selling betel nuts and cigarettes to passing customers at a street kiosk below his apartment, Shin .

Title



The literal translation of the Taiwanese title is 'Help Me, God of Love', since Eros is an artefact of . The exclamation is a wry reference to the film's comically cynical perspective on human relationships, in which a wide variety of unlikely subjects - food, marijuana and , amongst others - become substitute objects of comfort and affection for the protagonists. The plea for help is also a strong theme in the form of the suicide hotline.

Plot



The film is set in modern Taipei, Taiwan. The infamous opening sequence depicts the protagonist lying on the designer sofa in his apartment watching a cookery segment on his TV, in which a carp is swiftly scaled, gutted, cooked and served alive, its mouth still slowly opening and closing.

Jie ambles around his almost bare apartment, cooking instant noodles, tending his treasured marijuana plants in their closet nursery and explaining his problems to counsellor Chyi on the suicide hotline. A former stockbroker, recently fired, he resorts to selling off his remaining designer furniture at a nearby pawn shop to maintain his paltry existence.

Chyi, the counsellor he compulsively requests from the hotline call center, is a young but overweight woman. Jie pleads with her over the line for more satisfying contact, but she is reluctant to accede. Jie fantasises about Chyi, idealising her as beautiful girl in a revealing novelty outfit pleasuring herself to the sound of his voice and exhaling the marijuana smoke he breathes onto the telephone handset. When she leaves work for her marital home she finds her husband in a frenzy of activity, preparing her an enormous gourmet meal. She eats alone whilst he watches TV with his conspiciously attractive friend, who he informs her will be staying with them for a while. He fills the bathtub with live eels whilst she sits watching in her underwear. She attempts to maneouvre her husband into sex, but he flinches away from her touch. Left alone in the bathroom, Chyi playfully pushes them around with her toes. Later in the evening, as she walks past the two of them playing pool on her way to the kitchen for a tub of ice cream, the camera pans to reveal that both of them men are naked from the waist down.

In the street kiosk below, the sit at a counter above street level and wait for customers. The newest employee, Shin, struggles to fit in with the more established girls. Jie pays her for cigarettes with an out-of-circulation coin and earns her a reprimand. One night, as she tries to extricate her scooter from the rank outside the building, Jie stops to assist her. In return he asks her to drive her somewhere.

They arrive at a used-car lot, and whilst Shin waits on the scooter Jie slips into the lot and opens one of the cars using a key he has brought with him, revealing it to be yet another piece of property he has given up since losing his job. He and Shin drive around the city, taking their own photograph using a speed camera, and eventually park up somewhere in the city for Jie to smoke a joint of his home-grown marijuana. He cups his hands around his and Shin's faces to allow her to breathe his exhaled smoke.

Abruptly, the couple are shown copulating in a number of extraordinarily acrobatic positions, most of which involve Jie suspending Shin completely in his arms. As they relax in bed afterwards, Jie at his laptop and Shin lying next to him, Chyi contacts Jie on MSN. Her personal image is of her and a pretty, far thinner co-worker who Jie assumes must be her. Chyi is too ashamed to deny it and plays along. The next day Jie waits outside the hotline office for the woman in the photo, who he follows around the city for a while. He mentions the details of her itinerary to Chyi when he next calls in, provoking confused denials.

At the street kiosk one of the more established girls, who has formed a more personal relationship with a regular client in an expensive car, leans in on the promise of another gift and the man attempts to drive off with her. She is dragged along the road for a few feet before she finally falls back to the street and the car speeds off. The other girls take her inside to console her, and Jie brings first her and then all of the betel nut girls copious amounts of his marijuana. This scene implies that his plants produce a powerful sexually intoxicating effect. Jie ends up on the roof of the apartment building in a languid threesome with two betel nut girls, as brand logos are projected across their entangled bodies from an unverifiable source.

The next morning Shin comes up to his apartment. He has asked her to bring water, and she has brought two small bottles of mineral water. She quickly realises that the apartment's water and power have been turned off due to his non-payment of his bills. She suggests that she helps him with the money, implying a furtherance of their relationship, and he stubbornly refuses to discuss it. He becomes aggressive with her, angry that she has misunderstood his request for water - he needs industrial quantities to keep his marijuana plants alive. Shin is outraged by his attitude and pulls his plants out of the cupboard, smashing the pots underfoot and trampling them into the floor with her patent leather boots.

Shin takes a bus back to a rural area where she works on a large plantation. Back at the apartment building, Jie appears remorseful and hangs around the kiosk, asking after her. When he begs one of the other girls to text Shin, she informs him that Shin doesn't want to speak to him. He sells the rest of his possessions, including his TV and sofa, and uses the proceeds to buy lottery tickets.

Jie calls the hotline and leaves a message for Chyi, who is eating at a roadside restaurant and watching the cookery programme that demonstrated the live carp preparation in the opening sequence of the film. It is her husband and his lover presenting it, on location at an ostrich farm. They are attempting to cook an ostrich egg omelette, but when they break the egg into the pan a dead baby ostrich is released into the hot oil. At the sight of this gruesome image, Chyi runs to the riverside to be sick. As she recovers, she receives a text from her office to say that Jie has called to say that he plans to kill himself. He has left an address and she hurries to his apartment building.

In his apartment, Jie attempts to kill himself by turning on the gas canister for his stove and lying on the floor. He awakes later, dazed but patently alive, to discover that the canister is empty. He opens the street-side windows and steps onto the windowsill as Chyi hurries up the stairs. Meanwhile, Shin returns and approaches the street kiosk.

Chyi bursts into the apartment to find it empty. Standing on the street below, Shin is suddenly covered in a shower of lottery tickets. Jie has apparently disappeared somewhere between the window and the street.

Awards



Help Me Eros was nominated for two 2008 Asian Film Awards in the categories of Best Cinematographer and Best Production Designer, and for the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival in 2007. It won the Grand Prix Asturias award in the Gijón International Film Festival in the category of Best Feature.

Goodbye, Dragon Inn

Goodbye, Dragon Inn is a film directed by Tsai Ming-liang about the last feature at an historic Taipei .

''Goodbye, Dragon Inn'' is set in the approximately ninety minutes of the last feature at an old and grand Taipei cinema that is closing down, showing King Hu's 1967 sword-fighting classic ''Dragon Inn''. Only a few people are present in the cinema, and a variety of subplots are developed around them. Throughout the film, the ticket woman tries to find the projectionist, searching for him in order to present him with a steamed bun, yet they never meet. A young hustler wanders around the cinema in search of a homosexual encounter. A Japanese man tells him that the cinema is haunted, and there seems to be a certain amount of truth in that. An old man who was one of the actors who appeared in the original ''Dragon Inn'', watches the film with tears in his eyes. Outside the theatre he encounters an older man who had been watching the film with his grandson; this man also starred in the original film.

The film is shot with almost no camera movement, most shots lasting well over thirty seconds. There are only about a dozen of lines of dialogue, with a clear focus on the visual.

Cast


*Lee Kang-sheng as the projectionist
*Chen Shiang-chyi as the ticket woman
*Mitamura Kiyonobu as the Japanese tourist
*Chun Shih as himself
*Miao Tien as himself
*Chen Chao-jung as himself
*Yang Kuei-Mei as the peanut-eating woman

Goodbye South, Goodbye

Goodbye South, Goodbye is a 1996 film directed by Hou Hsiao-Hsien starring Hsi Hsiang, Hsu Kuei-Ying, Annie Shizuka Inoh, Jack Kao, Kao Ming, Lei Ming, Lien Pi-tung, Lim Giong, and Vicky Wei.

It was chosen along with '''' and ''Carlito's Way'' as the best film of the 1990s by ''Cahiers du Cinema''.

Good Men, Good Women

Good Men, Good Women is a 1995 film directed by Hou Hsiao-Hsien, starring Annie Shizuka Inoh, Lim Giong and Jack Kao. It is the last installment in the trilogy that began with A City of Sadness and continued with . Like its predecessors, it deals with the complicated issues of Taiwanese history and National Identity.

Plot



The film depicts the real life story of Chiang Bi-Yu . In the 1940s, she and her newlywed husband, Chung Hao-Tung , head to mainland China to join the anti-Japanese resistance. During the war, she is forced to give her baby for adoption. After the war they return to Taiwan, as Chung is to distribute a communist paper called "The Enlightenment". However, as the Korean War deepens, Chiang Kai-Shek's Kuomintang regime intensifies the White Terror and Chung is eventually executed.

Scattered throughout the film are interludes of an actress who prepares for the role of Chiang Bi-Yu, and confronts her deceased boyfriend's past.

Awards



''Good Men, Good Women'' won the Golden Horse Award , and was shown in the Cannes Film Festival.

Formula 17

Formula 17 is a film which was directed by Chen Yin-jung . It stars Tony Yang , , King Chin , Dada Ji , Jimmy Yang , and Jason Chang . It is a gay romantic comedy film about Chou T'ien-Tsai, a romantic Taiwanese male who takes a trip to visit an online boyfriend in person for the first time. Finding his internet relationship unsuitable for his real life, he moves on with his life and rooms with an old time friend of his. The film describes T'ien's experiences with his loyal roommate and his friends, and a surprising relationship that he develops with the local "Playboy".

This film was banned in Singapore because it "portrayed homosexuality as normal, and a natural progression of society".

Plot summary



Naive countryman Chou T'ien-Tsai goes to Taipei to meet an internet friend face-to-face. Being a romantic, and believing in 'true love' , he is sorely disappointed when his friend suggests they have sex with no love. T'ien instead goes to a bar and runs into his ex-classmate Yu, and in the process meets the 'Number One Playboy' Bai Tie Nan, who is notorious for one night stands. T'ien very quickly develops a liking towards Bai.

After the night at the bar and becoming roommates with Yu, T'ien gets a job as a pool attendant and has several run-ins with Bai, who seems to like T'ien mutually. Scenes with Bai and his psychologist show that Bai has a problem kissing people. After being advised to practice kissing a mirror and then a dummy, both of which fail to help him, he tries to kiss his longtime friend, but can't bring himself to do it.

One night, T'ien shows up at Bai's doorstep and they end up having sex consensually. True to his nature, Bai disappears the next day, leaving his friend to turn up at his house and explain that 'he hopes you don't misunderstand'. T'ien, hurt and unknowing of the entire story behind Bai's intimacy issues, leaves a message saying that 'this kind of misunderstanding won't happen again'.

T'ien prepares to leave his roommate's dwelling and return to his own home. In the meantime, T'ien's friends corner Bai, who admits that he hurt the person he loves. After a silent prayer for a second chance, he sees T'ien heading up an escalator. His first attempt to apologise fails, and T'ien literally runs away. He nearly gets run down by a scooter, but Bai saves him and they make up.

The ending credits include a short segment on the three supporting cast members and their somewhat stereotyped views upon gay fashion.

Flowers of Shanghai

Flowers of Shanghai is a 1998 film directed by Guangdong-born Taiwanese Hou Hsiao-hsien starring Fang Shuan, Hada Michiko, Annie Shizuka Inoh, Jack Kao, Carina Lau, , Rebecca Pan, Michelle Reis and Vicky Wei.

Fingers That Kill

Fingers That Kill is a and Hong Kong film .

Fatal Needles vs. Fatal Fists

Fatal Needles vs. Fatal Fists is a kung fu film directed by Lee Tso Nam, and starring Don Wong Tao and Lo Lieh.

Plot


Meng Hu and Capt. Chow Lung are local supercops who are cracking down on crime with a vengeance. That is, until several fighters get the drop on Chow who ends up dead. Meng blames himself and retires from crime fighting to become a pathetic drunk, drowning in shame. He finds work at a brothel for a time, until a patron's abuse of one of the girls causes him to interfere despite his refusal to fight. After being wounded, he stumbles to the doorstep of a martial arts school run by Magistrate Chen . Hoping to stay away from conflict, Meng finds work there, but trouble finds him anyway. A white-haired master named Chung Tung tries to bribe Chen into letting opium smugglers into the city. Chen refuses and has acupuncture needles thrust into him that will kill him unless removed by Chung Tung who hopes to control the magistrate. Pushed to the limit, Meng finally comes up with a plan to help beat Chung Tung and save Chen. Sadly, Chen believes his son and daughter are giving into Chung Tung and he removes the needles himself. With nothing holding them back, Meng and Chen's offspring leap into action to take out this pack of drug pushers.

Eternal Summer

Eternal Summer is a 2006 Taiwanese film directed by Leste Chen.

Plot summary



Three high school students experience the perks and pitfalls of love in director Leste Chen's sensitive tale of friendship and yearning. As a child living in a seaside town in southern Taiwan, studious Jonathan was asked by his concerned teacher to look after rebellious classmate Shane . Ten years later, what was once a good-natured obligation has since blossomed into a warm friendship, with Jonathan still on the academic track and Shane finding his calling on the basketball court.

When Taiwan-born schoolgirl Carrie transfers to their school from Hong Kong and convinces Jonathan to join her on a secret day-trip to Taipei, her botched effort to seduce him in a sleazy love hotel, combined with her observations of he and Shane's friendship, soon leads her to believe that the object of her affections is homosexual and in love with his best friend. Despite her initial misgivings about the boorish Shane, Carrie soon begins to give in to the troublemaker's roguish charms. She accepts his offer to become his girlfriend on the condition that he manages to enter university. Later, as Shane pulls his act together and Jonathan begins to experience a sexual identity crisis, the former does his best to keep his feelings for Carrie secret in order to protect the feelings of his lifelong friend. Despite Jonathan's, Shane's, and Carrie's best efforts to keep their personal feelings secret, the truth eventually emerges, forcing all three to view their relationships in an entirely new light.

Critics throughout Taiwan gave this movie rave reviews, and this film was nominated for many awards. Many actors cite this movie as one of their favorite movies, such as Wang Lee-Hom, Johnny Yan, Evelyn Wa, and Ming Dao.

Soundtrack

Dust in the Wind (film)

Dust in the Wind is a critically-acclaimed but commercially unsuccessful movie by Taiwanese filmmaker Hou Hsiao-Hsien.

Yi Yi: A One and a Two

Yi Yi: A One and a Two is an acclaimed film directed by Edward Yang about the emotional struggles of a business man and the lives of his middle class Taiwanese family in Taipei seen though three generations. The English title refers to how two Chinese characters for "" written in vertical alignment can be viewed as meaning " One" or as a single character meaning "" .

''Yi Yi'' is an epic story about the Jiang family seen through three different perspectives: the father NJ , the son Yang-Yang , and the daughter, Ting-Ting . The three-hour piece starts with a wedding, concludes with a funeral, and contemplates all areas of human life in-between with profound humour, beauty and poignancy. The other Taiwanese cast members include Elaine Jin as NJ's wife, Min-Min, Su-Yun Ko as NJ's former love Sherry, Hsi-Sheng Chen as Ah-Di, and Pang Chang Yu as Fatty. The film also stars Japanese comedian Issei Ogata as a Japanese software mogul, Ota.

Awards and accolades


Following its debut at the Cannes Film Festival in 2000, ''Yi Yi'' has collected a host of awards from prestigious international film festivals. ''Yi Yi'' garnered its director, Edward Yang the at Cannes Award in 2000 and was nominated for the Palme d'Or in the same year. ''Yi Yi'' won the Karlovy Vary International Film Festival's Netpac Award, the Vancouver International Film Festival's Chief Dan George Humanitarian Award and tied with ''Topsy-Turvy'' to win the 2000 Sarajevo Film Festival's Panorama Jury Award. The film also won Best Foreign Film from the French Syndicate of Cinema Critics in 2001, the Grand Prix at the Friboug International Film Festival in Switzerland in 2001, The Best Foreign Film from the Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards in 2000, Best Film from the National Society of Film Critics in 2001, and Best Foreign Language Film from the New York Film Critics Circle Awards in 2000. It was also named one of the best movies of 2001 by many prominent publications and intellectuals, including the ''New York Times'', ''Newsweek'', ''USA Today'' the ''Village Voice'', ''Film Comment'', the ''Chicago Reader'', and the author Susan Sontag, among others.

In 2002, the film was selected by the British film magazine ''Sight and Sound'' as one of the ten greatest films of the past twenty-five years, among ''Apocalypse Now''. ''Raging Bull'', ''Fanny and Alexander'', ''GoodFellas'', ''Blue Velvet'', ''Do the Right Thing'', ''Blade Runner'', ''Chungking Express'', ''Distant Voices, Still Lives'', and ''Once Upon a Time in America''.

Wolves Cry Under the Moon

Wolves Cry Under the Moon is a directed by Ho Ping, starring Annie Shizuka Inoh, Shih Chang, Gu Bao-ming and To Tzong-hua.

Vive L'Amour

Vive L'Amour is a film by Tsai Ming-liang. It is a slow paced film with sparse dialogue about urban alienation, centering on three people who unknowingly share an apartment in Taipei.

The film won three Golden Horse Awards for Best Director, Best Picture and Best Sound Effects. It also won the prestigious Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival.

Three Times

Three Times is a ese film directed by Hou Hsiao-Hsien. It features three chronologically separate stories of love between May and Chen, set in 1911, 1966 and 2005, using the same lead actors, Shu Qi and Chang Chen. The film was nominated for the ''Palme d'Or'' at the 2005 Cannes Film Festival and received positive reviews.

Background



''Three Times'' was originally meant to be an omnibus collection of short films, with Hou Hsiao-hsien directing only one of the segments. The producers were unable to rustle the financing to be able to hire three directors, so instead, Hou took over production.

Critical reception



''Three Times'' received generally positive, sometimes ecstatic reviews when it was released in North America. It currently holds an 85% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes, with 86% among the 'Cream of the Crop.' Most critics agreed that the opening segment, ''A Time for Love'', was the most successful, and that the final segment, ''A Time for Youth'' was the least successful. Response was somewhat mixed for the second segment, ''A Time for Freedom'', with many critics likening it to Hou's ''Flowers of Shanghai''.

Roger Ebert, who championed the film at Cannes, gave it four stars in his review for the ''Chicago Sun-Times'':"Three stories about a man and a woman, all three using the same actors. Three years: 1966, 1911, 2005. Three varieties of love: unfulfilled, mercenary, meaningless. All photographed with such visual beauty that watching the movie is like holding your breath so the butterfly won’t stir"

Kay Weissberg in '''' was very positive:"Synthesizing Hou Hsiao-hsien's ambivalent relationship with time and memory, ''Three Times'' forms a handy connecting arc between the Taiwanese helmer's earlier work and the increasingly fragmentary direction of his recent films. Best appreciated by those familiar with his slow rhythms and pessimistic take on contempo life, pic presents three stories using the same leads set in three time periods to explore love and how the present circumscribes lives."

Stephen Witty of the ''Newark Star-Ledger'' was not impressed:"According to one American critic, ''Three Times'' is "why cinema exists." Only if you think that cinema has no higher calling than presenting a long series of gorgeously lit close-ups of beautiful actresses are you likely to agree."

Jim Jarmusch: "Hou Hsiao-hsien is not only the crowning jewel of contemporary Taiwanese cinema, but an international treasure. His films are, for me, among the most inspiring of the past thirty years, and his grace and subtlety as a filmmaker remain unrivaled. Film after film, Hou Hsiao-hsien is able to adeptly balance a historical and cultural overview with the smallest, most quiet and intimate details of individual interactions. His narratives can appear offhand and non-dramatic, and yet the structures of the films themselves are all about storytelling and the beauty of its variations. And Hou's camera placement is never less than exquisite.



His newest film, THREE TIMES, is also his newest masterpiece. A trilogy of three love stories, Chang Chen and Shu Qi beautifully portray Taiwanese lovers in three distinct time periods: 1966, 1911 and 2005. The first section , just on its own, is one of the most perfect pieces of cinema I’ve ever seen. The second, set in a brothel in 1911, remarkably explores dialogue and verbal exchange by almost completely eliminating sound itself , while the final piece leaves us in present-day Taipei — a city of rapidly changing social and physical landscapes where technology has a harsh effect on delicate interpersonal communication. The resonance of these combined stories, their differences and similarities, their quietness and seeming simplicity, left me in a near dream-state - something that only happens to me after the most striking cinematic experiences.



Now, for the first time, one of Hou Hsiao-hsien's films is finally being properly released in the U.S. And this makes me, as a true fan, very, very happy."

Jim Jarmusch - NYC - March, 2006

Box Office



''Three Times'' was released in the United States on April 26, 2006, and was only the second film by Hou Hsiao-hsien to receive theatrical distribution in the USA . In its opening weekend on three screens, it grossed $14,197 USD . Never playing at more than five theatres at any point during its theatrical run, it eventually grossed $151,922 USD in total.

Awards and nominations



* 2005 Cannes Film Festival
** Nominated: Palme d'Or

* 2005 Golden Horse Awards
** Won: Best Taiwanese Film
** Won: Best Actress
** Won: Best Taiwanese Filmmaker
** Nominated: Best Actor
** Nominated: Best Art Direction
** Nominated: Best Cinematography
** Nominated: Best Director
** Nominated: Best Editing
** Nominated: Best Makeup and Costume Design
** Nominated: Best Picture
** Nominated: Best Original Screenplay

*2005 Hong Kong Film Awards
** Nominated: Best Asian Film

The Wayward Cloud

The Wayward Cloud is a film by Tsai Ming-liang. The cast includes Lee Kang-sheng and Chen Shiang-chyi. The film was Taiwan's official entry for the 78th Academy Awards in the foreign-language category.

Plot


In an age of severe water shortage, television programs are teaching various water-saving methods and encouraging the drinking of watermelon juice in place of water. However, everyone has their own solutions when it comes to finding water.

Scenes


The movie was filmed in Kaohsiung, Taiwan.

*Dragon and Tiger Pagodas
*Love River

The Touch (2002 film)

The Touch is a 2002 Hong Kong action-adventure/martial arts film directed by ''Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon'' cinematographer Peter Pau and starring Michelle Yeoh, Ben Chaplin and Richard Roxburgh. It was produced by China Film Co-production Corporation, Han Entertainment, Mythical Films, Pandasia Entertainment and Tianjan Studios, with the distribution handled by Miramax Films.

Apart from special effects sequences shot in soundstages, the film was shot on-location in the Himalayas, Nepal, China and Tibet. Some of the mountain ranges in which the film was shot were not open to filmmakers earlier.

Synopsis



''The Touch'' tells the story of a Chinese family of martial artists and acrobats who have been performing for many generations. The family are, in secret, guardians of a holy treasure accessible only by a spectacular jump which, to everyone else, is impossible to perform.

One of the family members and his girlfriend are kidnapped by a ruthless treasure hunter to procure the priceless relic for him. Yeoh's character Pak Yin, with the help of Eric , her master thief ex-boyfriend, pursues them into an ancient desert where legends say the treasure is buried in order to uncover and protect the treasure that her ancestors had sworn to keep safe. The action culminates in a climactic sequence set in the booby-trapped subterranean Buddhist temple.

Reception



The film was generally panned by critics for its cliched storyline and primitive visual effects.

External links and references


*

The Time to Live and the Time to Die

The Time to Live and the Time to Die is a film directed by Hsiao-hsien Hou.