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What Time is it There?

Ni neibian jidian

Taiwan

2001

116 Min
  • Currently 4.1/5 Stars.
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DIR Tsai Ming-liang

PROD Bruno Pésery

SCR Tsai Ming-liang, Yang Pi-ying

DP Benoît Delhomme

CAST Lee Kang-sheng, Shi Chen, Tien Miao, Cecilia Yip, Jean-Pierre Léaud

Synopsis

Hsiao-Kang sells watches in the streets of Taipei for a living. A few days after his father’s death, he meets a young woman, Shiang-Chyi, who as it turns out leaves for Paris the very next day. Troubled by the behavior of his mother who prays constantly for the spirit of her late husband to return, Hsiao-Kang takes refuge in the memory of his brief encounter with Shiang-Chyi. In an effort to bridge the miles between them, he runs around setting all the watches and clocks in Taipei to Paris time. Meanwhile, in Paris, Shiang-Chyi confronts events that mysteriously seem to be connected with Hsiao-Kang.

(Source: http://www.screenrush.co.uk/film/fichefilm_gen_cfilm=34855.html)

Director

Tsai_ming-liang

Tsai Ming-liang

Along with Edward Yang and Hou Hsiao-hsien, Tsai Ming-liang became one of Taiwan’s most prominent directors during the 1990s. His films regularly appeared in festivals around the globe and he received lavish praise from film critics worldwide. Born in Malaysia in 1957, Tsai moved to Taiwan and graduated from the Chinese Cultural University in 1982. For the next ten years, he worked in theater and writing screenplays for films and television. He directed his first feature in 1992, Rebels of the Neon God, which, with its tough but tender depictions of disaffected youth, earned him comparisons to Rainer Werner Fassbinder. In addition to Fassbinder, Tsai was also influenced by François Truffaut, to whom he was exposed as a student. His style differed from his idol Truffaut’s, however, like his countrymen Yang and Hou, Tsai preferred long takes, few close-ups, and sparse dialogue. And like another of his influences, Michelangelo Antonioni, he displayed a genius for placing the camera at… read more

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rajiv ibrahim

9Jan10

i'd say this is one of the best asian movie i've ever seen., love tsai ming-liang's style..  
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Robert W Peabody III

26Dec09

to move forward while the past haunts the present..... life as plot-less narrative  
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Scøut

16Dec09

L'Avventura, but today and in colour! Heart-warming.  
Picture of Law

Law

3Dec09

What Time is it There? is a fantastic exploration of alienation and ennui in contemporary society. I paricularly enjoyed the linking of an alienated Antoine and the alienated people of today. Using the "Asian minimalism" long take style, Tsai constructs an always interesting and meaningful form to accompany the themes of the film to great success as his characters search endlessly for existential meaning.  

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Untitled

By Jimmy on November 15, 2009

A re-“watch”. This time, the movie was less funny, but more tender, and even sadder than before. I was struck by the sadness of seemingly awkward private gestures, the girl stuffing her face with crackers…  read review

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Questions About What Time is it There?

22 posts by 5 people about 1 month ago