You are here

What Time Is It There? Taiwan as Crossroads Film Festival

Part of the "Spotlight Taiwan" program at the UCLA Center for Chinese Studies, this month-long film festival spotlights Taiwanese film

When:
February 15, 2014 12:00am to March 19, 2014 12:00am
Print

A national cinema distinguishes itself by filmmakers and films, but also, of course, by its coherence around themes and fascinations. The cinema of Taiwan, with its own world-renowned auteurs and healthy spread of popular genres, offers a striking distinction that appears in many guises: the formulation of Taiwan as a locus of plurality, liminality, change, exchange, and other de-centering principles that construct the nation not so much as a place of foundations, but of negotiations. In part, this is certainly a response to Taiwan’s national history, which also informs the national imaginary: an experience of massive migrations and overlapping colonizations spanning many centuries, as well as economic shifts that have witnessed increasingly frenetic flows of capital and labor in recent years. Corresponding with paradigm shifts in scholarly thought about the reality and image of Taiwan in the world, this film series, featuring new and classic comedies, dramas, formally rigorous art films and historical epics, offers visions of a nation acting not only as an origin or a destination, but as a relay point or hub through which people, art, investment, technology and social change pass, undergoing creative adaptations and transformations. This vision in turn presents a rewarding insight into Taiwan’s image and self-image, and accounts for much of the beauty and dynamism of its cinematic output. We are pleased to offer this eclectic selection, magnifying all of these themes.

Curated by Robert Chi and Shannon Kelley. This series is part of the "Spotlight Taiwan" program at the UCLA Center for Chinese Studies, with financial support from the Taiwan Ministry of Culture.

Special thanks to: Susan Pertel Jain; Benjamin Chi—Taiwan Academy; Teresa Huang—Chinese Taipei Film Archive; Jennifer Jao; Ivy Chang—Taipei Film Commission; Enga Chang—Central Motion Picture Corporation.

Thanks to: Dennis Lo, Chang Chuti.

 

 

Image Title Date and Time Location Buy Tickets
Warriors of the Rainbow: Seediq Bale (2011)

Warriors of the Rainbow: Seediq Bale (Taiwan, 2011)

PROD: John Woo, Terence Chang, Huang Chih-ming.  DIR/SCR: Wei Te-sheng.  CINE: Chin Ting-chang.  EDIT: Chen Po-wen, Milk Su.  CAST: Lin Ching-tai, Umin Boya, Masanobu Andô.

Taiwan’s highest-grossing domestic film ever tells of the indigenous Seediq people, split into rival clans, who must find a way to overcome history and fight as one people against occupying Japan, during that nation’s colonial rule.  Mona Rudao, one of the Seediq clan chiefs, finally launches an armed rebellion at Wushe in 1930.  Based on a true story and richly detailed.

Digital video, color, in Seediq, Japanese and Taiwanese with English subtitles, 144min. 

February 15, 2014 - 7:00 pm Billy Wilder Theater Buy Tickets
Ye-Zai (Taiwan, 2012)

Ye-Zai (Taiwan, 2012); Pinoy Sunday (Taiwan/Philippines, 2009)

Ye-Zai,

DIR: Tseng Ying-ting.  SCR: Chen Yuli, Tseng Ying-ting.  CINE: Hsu Fu-hsiang.  EDIT: Li Chun-hung.  CAST: Shih Ming-Shuai, Sajee Apiwong, Phanet Phongsai, Wu Pong-fong, Huang Caiyi.

Taiwan’s economic development has made it a regional magnet for new immigrants alongwith new social problems and new stories about them.  A new local profession has emerged as well: bounty hunters who catch illegal and runaway foreign workers.  But when one bounty hunter, Ye-Zai, is sent to catch his own family’s runaway Thai maid, who is he really chasing?

Digital video, color, in Mandarin and Thai with English subtitles, 81 min.

Pinoy Sunday

 PROD: Natacha Devillers, Morihisa Matsudaira, Mark Meily, Kenichiro Takiguchi.  DIR: Ho Wi Ding.  SCR: Ajay Balakrishnan, Ho Wi Ding.  CAST: Bayani Agbayani, Epy Quizon, Meryll Soriano, Nor Domingo, Dave Ronald Cheng.

Taipei-based Malaysian filmmaker Ho Wi Ding’s comedy introduces two disadvantaged,Taipei-based Filipino migrant factory workers who see their fortunes possibly changing when they encounter a new, expensive sofa abandoned on a city sidewalk.  Hoping the almost mythical find will change their lives (it certainly changes their day), they carry the sofa homeward---facing obstructions both logistical and cultural in the churning, polyglot metropolis.

35mm, color, in Tagalog, Mandarin and English with English subtitles, 84 min.

February 16, 2014 - 7:00 pm Billy Wilder Theater Buy Tickets
Warriors of the Rainbow: Seediq Bale Part II: Rainbow Bridge (Taiwan, 2011)

Warriors of the Rainbow: Seediq Bale Part II: Rainbow Bridge (Taiwan, 2011)

PROD: John Woo, Terence Chang, Jimmy Huang.  DIR/SCR: Wei Te-sheng.  CINE: Chin Ting-chang.  EDIT: Chen Po-wen, Milk Su.  CAST: Lin Ching-tai, Umin Boya, Masanobu Andô.

After the initial uprising at Wushe, Mona Rudao faces an unwinnable guerrilla war against the militarily superior Japanese plus fierce rival Seediq clans.  He and his followers must fight not just for their lives but for their dignity and honor—so that they can truly be Seediq Bale or “real men”.

Digital video, color, in Seediq, Japanese and Taiwanese with English subtitles, 131min.

Note: Part II will be presented a second time, as a matinee on February 22.  Tickets purchased for tonight’s program will also be honored at the February 22 screening.

February 22, 2014 - 3:00 pm Billy Wilder Theater  
Home Sweet Home (1970)

Our Neighbors (Taiwan, 1963); Home Sweet Home (Taiwan, 1970)

Our Neighbors

DIR: Lee Hsing.  SCR: Yao Feng-pang.  CINE: Lai Cheng-ying.  EDIT: Chang Yung-chia.  CAST:  Ho Yu-hua, Lei Ming, Li Kuan-chang, Li Yu-chen, Lo Wan-lin.

An orphaned girl in a poverty-stricken neighborhood is adopted by a kindly neighbor.  He struggles to support her honestly, despite opportunities to participate in a neighbor’s scurrilous get-rich-quick schemes.  Invoking the pain of Chinese exiles living in Taiwan, or missing relatives still in China, the touching film posits an in-between historical period during which it iscrucial for displaced residents to maintain virtue as a bedrock of identity.

HDCAM, b/w, in Mandarin and Taiwanese with English subtitles, 90 min.

Home Sweet Home

PROD: Henry Kung.  DIR: Pai Ching-jui.  SCR: Chang Yung-hsiang, based on a story by Meng Yao.  CINE: Lin Tsan-ting.  EDIT: Wang Jin-chen.  CAST: Chang Hsiao-yen, Chen Kuo Chun, Chen Hui Mei, Li Chang, Chu Bo-lin.

Going abroad has it’s own allures.  But what happens when people come back home?  This rediscovered classic combines an all-star ensemble cast, colorful clashes of rural nostalgia and sixties pop style, and film techniques that director Pai Ching-jui himself learned while studying filmmaking in Italy.

HDCAM, color, in Mandarin with English subtitles, 108 min.

February 23, 2014 - 7:00 pm Billy Wilder Theater Buy Tickets
Au Revoir, Taipei (2010)

Au Revoir, Taipei (Germany/Taiwan/USA, 2010); Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow? (Taiwan, 2013)

Au Revoir, Taipei

PROD: Wim Wenders, Liu Wei-Jan, In-Ah Lee, Meileen Choo.  DIR/SCR: Arvin Chen.  CINE: Michael Fimognari.  EDIT: Justin Guerrieri.  CAST: Jack Yao, Amber Kuo, Joseph Chang, Ke Yulun, Frankie Gao.

After Kai’s girlfriend goes abroad to study, he dreams of following her.  So he tries to teach himself French at the 24 hour Eslite Bookstore—where real adventures begin in Taipei, the most romantic city in the world.  Executive produced by Wim Wenders, American-born Taiwanese writer-director Arvin Chen’s debut feature won festival awards in Berlin, San Francisco, and Taipei.

35mm, color, in Taiwanese, Mandarin and French with English subtitles, 85 min.

Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow?

In Person: filmaker Arvin Chen

DIR/SCR: Arvin Chen.  CINE: Hsia Shao-Yu. EDIT: Justin Guerrieri.  CAST: Richie Ren, Mavis Fan, Kimi Hsia.

Writer-director Arvin Chen’s light-hearted second feature places his central character at a crossroads: married and contemplating a second child with his wife, Weichung re-encounters a former friend from his earlier gay life, uncorking an intoxicating brew of memories and new/old experiences.  Delightfully, the film positions his struggle as just one negotiation among many, as his family members also undergo relationship ups and downs, all handled with a deft touch.

Digital video, color, in Mandarin and Taiwanese with English subtitles, 104 min.

February 28, 2014 - 7:30 pm Billy Wilder Theater Buy Tickets
The Sandwich Man (1983)

The Sandwich Man (Taiwan, 1983); Island Etude (Taiwan, 2006)

The Sandwich Man

PROD: Ming Ji.  DIR: Hou Hsiao-hsien, Wan Jen, Jong Cheung-Tsang.  SCR: Wu Nien-chen.  CINE: Chen Kun Hao.  EDIT: Liao Ching-song.  CAST: Chen Bo Jeng, Cho Sheng-li, Chiang Hsia, Jing Ding, Yang Li-Yin.

Based on short stories by the nativist writer Huang Chunming, the three episodes in this film explore the local and everyday effects of distant modernizing forces in Taiwan during the 1960s.  One of the seminal films of the Taiwan New Cinema, The Sandwich Man launched the careers of its three young directors and shaped Taiwan’s onscreen image for years.

Digital video, color, in Mandarin and Taiwanese with English subtitles, 102 min.

Island Etude

PROD: Yang Lai-yin.  DIR/SCR/CINE: Chen Huai-en. EDIT: Chen Bo-wen.  CAST: Tung Ming-hsiang, Teng An-ning, Ruta Palionyte, Danny Deng, Darren.

A young man embarks upon a bicycle tour around the periphery of the island of Taiwan.  Along the way he encounters many fellow travelers---a graffiti artist, a lovely traveling student from Lithuania---allowing each to affect him in some way.  In this moving valentine to Taiwanese civil society, Ming’s experiences suggest the negotiations and transformations taking place everywhere in the country… for those open to experience.

35mm, color, in Mandarin and Lithuanian with English subtitles, 109 min.

March 8, 2014 - 7:30 pm Billy Wilder Theater Buy Tickets
What Time is it There? (2001)

What Time is it There? (Taiwan/France, 2001)

PROD: Bruno Pesery.  DIR: Tsai Ming-liang.  SCR: Tsai Ming-liang, Yang Pi-ying.  CINE: Benoît Delhomme.  EDIT: Chen Sheng-chang.  CAST: Lee Kang-sheng, Chen Shiang-chyi, Lu Yi-ching, Miao Tien, Jean-Pierre Léaud.

For two decades the Malaysian-Taiwanese auteur Tsai Ming-liang has explored spatial, temporal, and psychological displacement in the global city.  Here Tsai’s perennial leading man Hsiao-Kang sells his dual time wristwatch to a young woman about to leave Taipei for Paris.  Despite the earthly time zones that separate them, they find a connection via memory, ghosts, and—thanks to Truffaut alter ego Jean-Pierre Léaud—the cinema itself.

35mm, color, Taiwanese and French with English subtitles, 116 min. 

March 14, 2014 - 7:30 pm Billy Wilder Theater Buy Tickets
Stray Dogs (Taiwan/France, 2013)

Stray Dogs (Taiwan/France, 2013)

PROD: Jacques Bidou, Marianne Dumoulin.  DIR: Tsai Ming-liang.  SCR: Tung Cheng Yu, Song Peng Fei, Tsai Ming-liang.  CINE: Liao Pen Jung, Sun Wen Jong.  EDIT: Lei Chen Ching.  CAST: Lee Kang-sheng, Lee Yi-chieh, Lee Yi-cheng, Lu Yi-ching, Chen Shiang-chyi.

Tsai Ming-liang searingly renders the situational and emotional experiences of ahomeless family in remote, indifferent Taipei, with a pendant beauty that suggests memory and dream more than actual presence.  Highly figurative and enigmatic, the film shuttles its characters between alienating atmospheres where the filmmaker’s languorous treatment of duration, and performances qualifying as almost pure pantomime, hauntingly pose the question: what is next for these human souls?

Digital video, color, in Mandarin with English subtitles, 138 min.

March 16, 2014 - 7:00 pm Billy Wilder Theater Buy Tickets
Yang Yang (Taiwan, 2009)

Yang Yang (Taiwan, 2009); Chocolate Rap (Taiwan, 2009)

Yang Yang

PROD: Lee Khan.  DIR/SCR: Cheng Yu-chieh.  CINE: Jake Pollock.  EDIT: Liu Yue-xing.  CAST: Sandrine Pinna, Bryant Chang, Huang Chien-wei, Her Sy-huoy, Lee Khan.

Twenty-year-old Yang Yang stands out in a crowd.  A collegiate athlete turned fashion model, she’s a mixed race French-Taiwanese who is all too used to being fetishized, though she doesn’t speak a word of French.  Her tenuous sense of self, as one who is often admired or desired but always somehow separate, leads her on a tortuous life’s path where identity, loyalty and direction are all thrown into question.

Digital video, color, in Mandarin and French with English subtitles, 112 min.

Chocolate Rap

PROD: Chien Li-fen.  DIR/SCR/EDIT: Chi Y. Lee.  CINE: Lawrence Schweich.  CAST: Akio Chen, Chen Hsin-hung, Megan Lai, Huang Po-ching, Tong Jian-kong.

B-boys Choco and Pachinko dance with their heads on the ground and their feet in the air to get the attention of Ally, the classical pianist surfer girl downstairs.  UCLA alum Chi Y. Lee’s film captures the kinetic and funky youth culture of contemporary Taiwan out of which have emerged world-class competitive hip-hop dancers.  Do not try this at home!

Digital video, color, in Mandarin with English subtitles, 84 min.

March 19, 2014 - 7:30 pm Billy Wilder Theater

Buy Tickets

 

 

TICKETS:   Advance tickets are available for $10 at <http://www.cinema.ucla.edu/programs/ticketing-information>

Tickets are also available at the Billy Wilder Theater box office starting one hour before showtime: $9, general admission; FREE to all UCLA students with valid ID; $8, other students, seniors and UCLA Alumni Association members with ID.

PARKING:   At the Billy Wilder Theater for a $3 flat rate on weekdays after 6 p.m. and all day on Saturdays and Sundays.  Enter from Westwood Blvd., just north of Wilshire.

Phone Number: 
310-206-8013