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A Time to Live, A Time to Die

4th(1999) Special Programs in Focus

 

  • CountryTaiwan
  • Production Year1985
  • Running Time137min
  • Format 35mm
  • ColorCOLOR
Program Note
If Boys From Fengkuei is Hou Hsiao-Hsien′s most spontaneous film, then The Time to Live and The Time to Die is definitely his most personal one to date. It is an autobiographical film about growing up, but does not stop at that. Time unveils itself in layers, with casual grace, just like flipping through the pages of a family album. Ah Hao′s father suffers from chronic illness, but what hurts most is being far away from his home in the Mainland and not knowing when he will return. Ah Hao′s grandmother too, misses home; one day, she takes her favourite grandchild on an imaginary trip back home. "Cross the bridge, then it′s Meixian," she said. But she never makes it. She passes away unnoticed, blood draining from her decaying body. The scene is heart-rending, but nevertheless unsentimental. Life comes and goes, natural as the flow of river waters. Sometimes, it aches, but never too personally. Hou films his characters with great compassion, but always at a distance. Long takes, deep focus, multiple spaces in a single shot using windows and door frames, have all become stylistic trademarks of his work. Hou admires the writing of Shen Congwen, a Chinese author of the forties. His own works manifest the same generosity and lucidity. (Wong Ain-Ling)
Director
Director
Hou Hsiao-Hsien
Hou Hsiao-Hsien was born 1947 in Meixian, Guangdong and moved to Taiwan with his family as a child. He enrolled at the Film Department of the Taiwan National Academy of Arts in 1969, but it was not until 1981 that he directed his debut feature, Lovable You. With The Boys from Fengkuei(1983), Hou distinguished himself as one of the leading members of the New Taiwan Cinema. Two years later, he made his timeless masterpiece, <he Time to Live and The Time to Die(1985), followed by Dust in the Wind(1987), featuring the charismatic Li Tianlu for the first time. Then came the Taiwan trilogy: A City of Sadness(1989), The Puppetmaster(1993) and Good Men, Good Woman(1995). His most recent work Flowers of Shanghai(1998) is both a departure from and a culmination of his artistic ventures. Undoubtedly a world master. (Wong Ain-Ling)
Photo
Credit
  • Director Hou Hsiao-Hsien 허우 샤오시엔
  • Producer Xu Guo-Liang
  • Cast Feng Mei, Tang Yu0Yuen, Feng-Tien, Xin Shufem, Yiu ann-Shuim
  • Screenplay Chu Tien-Wen, Hou Hsiao-Hsien
  • Cinematography Lee Ping-Wen
  • Production Design Lin Chong-Wen
  • Music Chen Jian-Hua
  • Production Company Central Motion Picture Corporation
    8F, 116, Han Chung St., Taipei, Taiwan
    cmpc5a@ms32.hinet.net

  • World Sales Central Motion Picture Corporation
    8F, 116, Han Chung St., Taipei, Taiwan
    cmpc5a@ms32.hinet.net