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A City of Sadness

Beiqing chengshi

Taiwan

1989

157 Min
  • Currently 4.5/5 Stars.
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DIR Hou Hsiao-hsien

PROD Fu-Sheng Chiu

SCR T'ien-wen Chu, Nien-Jen Wu

DP Huai-en Chen

CAST Tony Leung Chiu Wai, Tianlu Li, Wou Yi Fang, Nakamura Ikuyo, Jack Kao, Ikuyo Nakamura, Chen-Nan Tsai, Shufen Xin, Sung Young Chen

Synopsis

Seen through the prism of the Lin family, this complex family drama from Taiwanese master Hou Hsiao Hsien details a brief but crucial moment in Taiwanese history between 1945, when 50 years of Japanese colonial rule came to an end, and 1949, when Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalist Kuomintang forces established a government-in-exile after the Communist army captured mainland China. The film opens with the reedy voice of Emperor Hirohito announcing Japan’s surrender as the eldest of the Lin clan’s four sons awaits the birth of his child in a coastal town not far from Taipei. Soon afterward, he changes the name of his Japanese decorated bar to “Little Shanghai” and begins trading in the post-war black market. The second son has died in Philippines during the war. The third son, who had a nervous breakdown in Shanghai, starts to consort with Shanghaiese drug dealers upon his return to Taiwan. Once the eldest learns of the third’s dealings, he forces him to stop. In retaliation, the Shanghaiese mob arranges for the third son to be imprisoned on trumped up charges of collaboration with the Japanese. The youngest son, Wen-ching, is a gentle deaf-mute photographer who has leftist leanings. The film climaxes with the notorious Incident of February 28, 1947, a Tiananmen Square-style massacre of native Taiwanese committed by Kuomintang troops resulting in between 18,000 to 28,000 causalities. The wounded pour into the neighbor clinic as Wen-ching and his friend Hinoe get arrested. After his release, Hinoe heads for the mountains to join the leftist guerillas while Wen-ching promises to look after his friend’s sister Hinomi. Soon after, Wen-ching and Hinomi marry. Just as she is about to bear a child, however, the Kuomintang arrests Wen-ching for his involvement with the guerillas.

Director

Hsiao-hsien_hou2

Hou Hsiao-hsien

Director Hou Hsiao Hsien, in a 1988 New York Film Festival World Critics Poll, was voted one of three directors who would most likely shape cinema in the coming decades. He has since become one of the most respected, influential directors working in cinema today. In spite of his international renown, his films have focused exclusively on his native Taiwan, offering finely textured human dramas that deal with the subtleties of family relationships against the backdrop of the island’s turbulent, often bloody history. All of his movies deal in some manner with questions of personal and national identity, particularly, “What does it mean to be Taiwanese?” In a country that has been colonized first by the Japanese and then by Chiang Kai-Shek’s repressive Nationalist Government, this question is pregnant with political connotations.

Hou was born to a member of the Hakka ethnic minority in southern Guangdong province in mainland China, but his parents emigrated to Kaohsiung, Taiwan… read more

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Picture of rado

rado

4Nov09

it's amazing but i couldn't finish it, because there was smoking in every shot. yes it is a part of the story but come on  

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Articles

Our roundup of essays and articles on this film.

Now in theaters: "Adventureland" (Mottola, USA)

By Daniel Kasman on April 13, 2009
Above: Kristen Stewart and Jesse Eisenberg take a break at Adventureland. I thought of the new wave of Taiwanese films that began in the 1980s and peaked around the time of Hou Hsiao-hsien's The Puppetmaster
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Reviews

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Untitled

By Rüdiger Tomczak on September 6, 2009

A CITY OF SADNESS is beside the other films of his Taiwan trilogy THE PUPPETMASTER and GOOD MEN, GOOD WOMEN, Hous greatest aachivement in recent film history. If Andre Bazins definition of a plansequence…  read review

Untitled

By Crap Monster on February 3, 2009

Sadly one of the more underrated films out there that still has not seen a English friendly release. I can understand completely some people’s dislike for this and other of Hou’s earlier works.  read review

Untitled

By mteller on November 25, 2008

I’ve been thinking about Hou and wondering why I don’t like him. I’ve seen 11 of his films now and there’s not a single one I would want to watch again. They’re all in that blah, not-bad-not-great…  read review

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