This text introduces the Western audience to the richness of New Taiwanese Cinema. It revisits a painful episode in Taiwanese history, creating an elliptical and impressionistic picture of Chiang Kai-shek's takeover of the island after the defeat of his Kuomintang army by Mao Zedong.
Top page
Complete description
Winner of the Golden Lion in Venice in 1989, A City of Sadness introduced Western audiences to the richness of New Taiwanese Cinema. Its director, Hou Hsiao-hsien is now recognised as one of the most profoundly original auteurs in contemporary cinema. A City of Sadness revisits a painful episode in recent Taiwanese history, creating an elliptical and impressionistic picture of Chiang Kai-shek's takeover of the island after the defeat of his Kuomintang army by Mao Zedong. Taiwan's politics and the suffering of her inhabitants are invoked by Hou in the story of an extended family of four brothers. The first Taiwanese film shot in direct sound, A City of Sadness echoes the forgotten voices of ordinary people facing political repression. Berenice Reynaud deciphers the complex social and historical threads that combine in the film while analysing its aesthetics in the context of Hou's entire career. His journey from being a commercial director to becoming the famed master of long takes and painterly compositions is referred to the history of Taiwanese cinema and the philosophy of forms in Chinese art.
Top page
General info
Publisher & Imprint:
BFI Publishing
City:
London
Pages:
96
More info:
height 190 mm
width 140 mm
weight 171 gr
thickness 6 mm
“Knowledge has no limits” This site is owned by DEA Mediagroup SpA.
Tel. + 39 06 852121 Fax. + 39 06 8543228 Via Pietro Boccanelli 27 00138 Roma Italy
P.Iva 00901181008 Cod.Fiscale 00469620587
Send your comments or suggestions to:
customerservice@deastore.com
If you are experiencing problems using the system, please refer to the deastore Online Help Center or inform our Technical Support at:
helpdesk@deastore.com