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What Time is it There?
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Directed by Tsai Ming-Liang
Master Taiwanese filmmaker Tsai Ming-Liang directs this look at three people looking for human connection. Hsiao-kang (Tsai regular Lee Kang-sheng) is a young man who sells watches from a briefcase in front of Taipei's train station. When his father (Mio Tien) suddenly dies at the beginning of the film, it sends Hsiao-kang and his mother, Lu, on two radically different trajectories. His grieving mother becomes obsessed with the return of her dead husband's spirit. Hsiao-kang starts to urinate into plastic bags and bottles rather than risk bumping into his father's ghost in the middle of the night. Around that same time, Hsiao-kang encounters an aggressive, though beautiful, lass named Shiang-chyi (Chen Shiang-chyi) who is travelling in a couple of days to Paris. Entranced by the girl, he reluctantly sells her his own watch even though he believes that item has some connection to his father. The encounter leaves with Hsiao-kang with a fixation that Paris is in another time. Soon, he is changing each and every clock he can find back seven hours to Parisian time, forging an obscure connection to Shiang-chyi. Shiang-chyi herself finds Paris to be little different from Taipei in terms of alienation and isolation. Though she has run ins with several people, including an irate Frenchman in the middle of a lover's tiff and none other than Jean-Pierre Leaud in a cemetery, she only finds some comfort when she meets a woman from Hong Kong (Cecila Yip) who generously shares her hotel room with her. This film was screened at the 2001 Toronto Film Festival. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
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chesterfilmschesterfilms Do you have the time.....to sit ...
by chesterfilms in chesterfilms Blog
lost interest.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"I can appreciate movies that take their time. I'm always up for a movie that is slow moving & meditative to make it's points. This film is about loneliness and it shows normal boring everyday life. It is a very good looking film with great color & composition. Great direction and performances, but it's painfully slow. It wasn't enjoyable to me at all. It's defiantly not a worthless film, and I can honestly see why some people dig it but I just can't get into it. I was looking forward to " [More]
RisseladaRisselada Which of these movies directed ...
by Risselada in Movie Polls
"Please reference this thread for the rules of this group. This may be a lesser known director for people not as interested in foreign cinema. But hopefully some of you have seen at least one or a couple of his films. Tsai Ming-liang is one of my favorite film directors working today, and I would encourage you to check out his stuff and s " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
What Time Is It Over There? is a masterful refinement of Tsai Ming-Liang's auterist vocabulary as articulated in his masterworks, Vive l'Amour and The Hole. His characters still wade through sterile cityscapes, looking for some shred of human comfort, while his camera remains distanced and unmoving. Like his cinematic kindred spirits, Michelangelo Antonioni and Yasujiro Ozu, Tsai masterfully evokes the interior world of his characters with a single shot -- be it Hsiao King quietly rebelling against his job by casually bashing an "unbreakable" watch against a handrail, or his mother frantically taping out a window lest the light scare her dead husband's spirit. Tsai's unblinking camera also beautifully captures the often tentative, clumsy attempts at communication. In one scene, Shiang-chyi hesitantly tries to engage a Hong Kongese woman in conversation in a crowded Parisian coffeehouse. Tsai's depiction -- not to mention Chen Shiang-chyi's performance -- of two strangers awkwardly trying to balance one's own gnawing loneliness with the other's expectations is an understated cinematic gem. Though still exploring themes of alienation and ennui, Time is perhaps Tsai's most humorous work to date. Not unlike slapstick comedy, Hsiao-kang's bizarre obsession with turning back time becomes increasingly funny through repetition. The practice reaches the height of absurdity when he tries to turn back the time on a massive clock on the face of a bank, recalling Harold Lloyd's famous encounter with a similar timepiece. A meticulously crafted look at mundane moments in life, What Time Is It Over There? becomes a work of quiet transcendence by its end. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
 

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Risselada
Risselada
loved it.
Puhnner
Puhnner
loved it.
kaspergutman
kaspergutman
loved it.
chesterfilms
chesterfilms
lost interest.