#hou hsiao-hsien

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The Green, Green Grass of Home (Hou-Hsiao Hsien, 1982)The Green, Green Grass of Home (Hou-Hsiao Hsien, 1982)The Green, Green Grass of Home (Hou-Hsiao Hsien, 1982)The Green, Green Grass of Home (Hou-Hsiao Hsien, 1982)The Green, Green Grass of Home (Hou-Hsiao Hsien, 1982)The Green, Green Grass of Home (Hou-Hsiao Hsien, 1982)The Green, Green Grass of Home (Hou-Hsiao Hsien, 1982)The Green, Green Grass of Home (Hou-Hsiao Hsien, 1982)

The Green, Green Grass of Home (Hou-Hsiao Hsien, 1982)


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shihlun: Hou Hsiao-hsien- The Boys From Fengkuei1983Jia Zhangke - Still Life2006shihlun: Hou Hsiao-hsien- The Boys From Fengkuei1983Jia Zhangke - Still Life2006

shihlun:

Hou Hsiao-hsien

-The Boys From Fengkuei

1983

Jia Zhangke

-Still Life

2006


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the black and white opening sequence from Hou Hsiao Hsien’s The Assassin (2015), cinematography by Mthe black and white opening sequence from Hou Hsiao Hsien’s The Assassin (2015), cinematography by Mthe black and white opening sequence from Hou Hsiao Hsien’s The Assassin (2015), cinematography by Mthe black and white opening sequence from Hou Hsiao Hsien’s The Assassin (2015), cinematography by Mthe black and white opening sequence from Hou Hsiao Hsien’s The Assassin (2015), cinematography by M

the black and white opening sequence from Hou Hsiao Hsien’s The Assassin (2015), cinematography by Mark Lee Ping Bin


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A Time to Live, a Time to Die (1985, dir. Hou Hsiao-hsien)

A Time to Live, a Time to Die (1985, dir. Hou Hsiao-hsien)


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communicants:City of Sadness (Hou Hsiao-hsien, 1989) communicants:City of Sadness (Hou Hsiao-hsien, 1989) communicants:City of Sadness (Hou Hsiao-hsien, 1989)

communicants:

City of Sadness (Hou Hsiao-hsien, 1989)


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13monden:Dust in the Wind (Hou Hsiao-hsien, 1986) 13monden:Dust in the Wind (Hou Hsiao-hsien, 1986)

13monden:

Dust in the Wind (Hou Hsiao-hsien, 1986)


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刺客聶隱娘 (2015)

刺客聶隱娘 (2015)


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The film industry may be in a moment of crisis–the American independent wing certainly is&ndasThe film industry may be in a moment of crisis–the American independent wing certainly is&ndasThe film industry may be in a moment of crisis–the American independent wing certainly is&ndasThe film industry may be in a moment of crisis–the American independent wing certainly is&ndasThe film industry may be in a moment of crisis–the American independent wing certainly is&ndasThe film industry may be in a moment of crisis–the American independent wing certainly is&ndasThe film industry may be in a moment of crisis–the American independent wing certainly is&ndasThe film industry may be in a moment of crisis–the American independent wing certainly is&ndasThe film industry may be in a moment of crisis–the American independent wing certainly is&ndas

The film industry may be in a moment of crisis–the American independent wing certainly is–but we should not forget what a golden age we’re enjoying. 

Most of the directors below are established “heavyweights.” Even more exciting than these ten films is knowing that there are at least ten more by directors we’ve scarcely (or never) heard of that will be just as wonderful.

The Assassin (Hou Hsiao-Hsien)

Poll 1,000 serious cinephiles and The Assassin is likely to win a “Most anticipated 2015” survey running away. Hou has one of the greatest bodies of work in film history and there’s no evidence to suggest his powers have diminished as he approaches his 70s. A martial arts film is a risk for a director known for his quiet lyricism, but expect this film to be thoroughly Hou. 

Mad Max: Fury Road (George Miller)

Strangely under-appreciated, Miller is perhaps the best living action director (The Road Warrior) and has a deft emotional touch as well (Lorenzo’s Oil, Babe 2). He even manged to take an apparent cash-in kiddie film and make something strange and moving (Happy Feet). Of all the directors of his generation, Miller is the least compromising. Expect Mad Max #4 to be visceral, violent, and weird. 

Tomorrowland (Brad Bird)

The track record of animators migrating to live action is a spotty one. Bird’s live-action debut (Mission Impossible 4) was competent but a far cry from his greatest films (The Iron Giant, Ratatouille). Unlike the Cruise franchise project, Tomorrowland appears to be a labor of love for Bird. Let’s hope he shoots for the moon and sticks the landing.

Silence (Martin Scorsese)

Scorsese has described his adaptation of Shusaku Endo’s beautiful novel Silence as his “next project” for over a decade. Something else (usually involving DiCaprio) seems to get in the way. No longer–Marty is finally on his way to realizing this dream project. The material (Catholicism, torments of the soul and the flesh, internal monologue) is perfect for him. But his last admitted dream project was the very mixed Gangs of New York, and there remains the little issue of an existing, excellent film adaptation of the novel by Masashiro Shinoda (Silence, 1971). Catholicism aside, can Marty adapt a Japanese novel better than a great Japanese director? I’m eager to find out. 

Untitled Cold War Thriller (Steven Spielberg)

For an icon, Steven Spielberg is hard to pin down. On one hand, he is a household name, the  once-in-a-generation director as famous as the biggest stars, able to raise money with ease. His middlebrow liberalism and frequently clumsy narrative instincts (see: endings) have marred numerous films. But he remains an astonishing talent and one of the few American hold-outs against TV-style shooting and editing. His treatment of history is mixed but Munich was a recent, albeit flawed, standout. This Cold War movie was written by the Coen Brothers. If there’s any antidote to Spielberg’s instinct for “shhh, it’ll be okay,” it’s these foremost American pessimists. Keep your fingers crossed.

Queen of the Desert (Werner Herzog)

Herzog is a magician. Without ever having a true hit, he’s been immensely prolific, worked with some of the biggest stars in the world, and become something of an ironic pop culture icon. If there were separate halls of fame for documentary and narrative filmmaking, he’d easily be enshrined in both (the Wilt Chamberlain of cinema?). This is his first narrative work since 2009’s Bad Lieutenant: POCNO. That it could just as easily be a masterpiece as a complete dud is why he’s such an exciting artist. 

Cemetery of Kings (Apitchapong Weerasethakul)

Apitchapong has made two towering masterpieces (Syndromes and a Century, Uncle Boonmee) and he’s just 42. He is one of the great dream poets of the cinema, a close kin to Cocteau, Tarkovsky, Bunuel, and Griffith. He is also fiercely political in a deftly subtle way. Expect Kings to comment on the Thai monarch through entirely unexpected methods. 

Horizontal Process (Abbas Kiarostami)

Kiarostami’s second international career is both heartbreaking and edifying. That this profoundly Iranian director must now work abroad to make his radical but hardly blasphemous work is deeply sad. But that he’s the rare director whose mastery of his medium can successfully navigate enormous language and cultural obstacles is a great gift to filmgoers. Set in Italy (like the recent Certified Copy),Horizontal Process will no doubt fuse deep, warm humanism with an intellect that defeats all comers. 

Umimachi Diary (Hirokazu Koreeada)

Based on an apparently popular manga–a flag of concern for me, since the manga-based Air Doll is Koreeda’s weakest mature work. There are few directors of acting better, though, and knowing this is a female ensemble piece is very intriguing. 


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Chang Chen in The Assassin, dir. Hou Hsiao-HsienChang Chen in The Assassin, dir. Hou Hsiao-HsienChang Chen in The Assassin, dir. Hou Hsiao-HsienChang Chen in The Assassin, dir. Hou Hsiao-Hsien

Chang Chen in The Assassin, dir. Hou Hsiao-Hsien


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“ I am also very sensitive to the sense of reality in the movie. For example, during one of the inti“ I am also very sensitive to the sense of reality in the movie. For example, during one of the inti

“ I am also very sensitive to the sense of reality in the movie. For example, during one of the intimate moments between governor Tian Ji’an and his concubine Huji we took many shots and did many takes. I didn’t do this to make the actors suffer but I wanted to feel that the scenes belonged to the actors.” - Hou Hsiao-Hsien on making The Assassin, Sense of Cinema


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atinycorner: How did you conceive of realism with this story from such a remote location and time?

atinycorner:

How did you conceive of realism with this story from such a remote location and time?

“ I tried to close in on some key details of daily life, and then zoom out to a wider canvas. For example, I learned that at dawn and dusk, the sound of the beating of drums would fill the streets. According to Tang custom, 3,000 drumbeats would sound from the imperial quarters. Every li [the unit in which distance was measured at the time], there is another drum that starts to beat, until everyone knew it was time to get up. This signified the beginning of a day. When it got dark, the drums would beat 500 times. This meant curfew time, when people had to stay confined to within one liof their living quarters. You can learn all this by reading the wuxia novels carefully. Beneath all the mystical or fantastic elements, you will find traces of daily minutiae, which help you understand the limits that defined life back then—how each day was bookended.”

-Hou Hsiao-Hsien in Film Comment


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atinycorner:

After probably rewatching Three Times 16 times already, I think what I love most about it is how you need to really pay attention to catch the small details. 

So in the first segment, ‘A Time For Love’, Chang Chen’s character (Chen) returns to the pool hall he frequents, but the pool hall girl he had a crush on no longer works there. Instead, there’s a new girl, May (Shu Qi):

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He’s disappointed and a bit bummed at first..but well.

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He asks the new girl for her name. I love how after she answers him, she shyly tucks in her hair.

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They play pool together till late at night

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He leaves for army service, but promises to write

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He comes back on leave from army, but May no longer works at the pool hall. After much effort, he finally manages to track her down

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I love how she basically can’t help collapsing into a fit of giggles that he’s come all the way here to see her.

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And they continue flashing dopey smiles at each other 

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They have dinner together adorably

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And finally when its time for him to go

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So simple, yet so lovely <3

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