Hou Hsiao-Hsien

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i saw goodbye dragon inn in the theater and it was indeed amazing. watched the river on dvd & didn't know what to make of it.

re: kiarostami, i've heard that too, i want to say maybe in the interview on the criterion taste of cherry dvd?

andrew s (andrew s), Monday, 21 March 2005 06:10 (nineteen years ago) link

The self-reflexiveness of GDI was certainly felt the 2 times I saw it in a theater.

The empty auditorium shot acquires meaning the longer it goes on. I found the last shot of GSG much more gimmicky and opaquely "cute."

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Monday, 21 March 2005 14:29 (nineteen years ago) link

The empty auditorium shot acquires meaning the longer it goes on.

Absolutely. It's almost a disappointment when it ends.

Has anyone seen "Last Life in the Universe"? I wanted to rent it last night but I was already over my rental limit. The cast looks good & Christopher Doyle shot it, so it's got to look nice at least.

jay blanchard (jay blanchard), Monday, 21 March 2005 14:56 (nineteen years ago) link

i have seen it. i loved it. very beautifully shot too.

ryan (ryan), Monday, 21 March 2005 15:30 (nineteen years ago) link

Thanks Ryan--I'll rent it this week.

jay blanchard (jay blanchard), Monday, 21 March 2005 17:06 (nineteen years ago) link

I saw "Last Life" at the Toronto Fest '03 (same week as Gbye Dragon Inn) and found it garbled and kinda precious despite the good look and Tadanobu Asano. The director was funny in the Q&A -- some dopey woman asked a witless question about all the smoking in the film, so he kept coming back to smoking as the KEY to the film until she fled.

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Monday, 21 March 2005 21:36 (nineteen years ago) link

hahaha. it is precious though i agree.

ryan (ryan), Tuesday, 22 March 2005 01:03 (nineteen years ago) link

Started watching "Last Life..." last night (only got about halfway through & stuff came up so I had to stop it). It's pretty good so far.

I had no idea what you guys meant by "precious", but it took me about five minutes into the film before it became crystal clear. It's not as bad as, say, "Garden State", but the convieniences & cute coincidences are annoying.

jay blanchard (jay blanchard), Monday, 28 March 2005 19:18 (nineteen years ago) link

yeah i like that stuff about it tho! havent seen garden state tho so i cant compare. i just thought it was really charming and sad, i am a total sucker for movies with that general aesthetic, it's basically the kind of movie i am always hoping to see.

ryan (ryan), Tuesday, 29 March 2005 00:45 (nineteen years ago) link

ryan, rereading my post, it sounds a lot harsher than I meant it to be. I finished watching "Last Life..." tonight & really enjoyed it. I think I'm going to have my girlfriend watch it as an introduction to modern Asian cinema--it seems pretty accessible, as it seems very "American-indie film" influenced (although much better than most of what is coming out of that genre lately).

Back on HHH, has anyone seen "Millenium Mambo"? I'd never heard of it, but saw it listed in the Palm Pictures catalog & then found it on Amazon for $6.98. If I get one thumbs up from someone here, I'm buying it.

jay blanchard (jay blanchard), Tuesday, 29 March 2005 01:54 (nineteen years ago) link

Just got my Sino Movie HHH boxset in the mail today.....teh cool.

jay blanchard (jay blanchard), Friday, 1 April 2005 23:58 (nineteen years ago) link

"Dust In the Wind" was fantastic--can't wait to watch the other three films in this set. I was upset at first about the lack of "touching up" (there is a lot of artifacts, slipped frames, etc.) but it almost adds to the film in a way. The cinematography was gorgeous & the opening shot absolutely blew me away (the train sequences reminded me quite a bit of Goodbye South Goodbye, which I'm really starting to think I judged unfairly, partly because I wasn't in the mood for a challenging film that day & also because I was unaccustomed to slow Taiwanese art films at the time. I'll be sure to give a review when I give it another chance.

jay blanchard (jay blanchard), Sunday, 3 April 2005 03:01 (nineteen years ago) link

"Millenium Mambo" was not what I was expecting, but was still pretty good. Probably the most accessible HHH I've seen, with Flowers of Shanghai being a close second. Next up is "The Time to Live and the Time to Die".

jay blanchard (jay blanchard), Monday, 4 April 2005 02:27 (nineteen years ago) link

one year passes...
Klawans really loves Three Times!

TRG (TRG), Monday, 8 May 2006 18:21 (eighteen years ago) link

I saw Kohi Jiko ("cafe lumiere") a few months ago... and i really liked it (i was in the minority of the group i went with).

There was talk of the heavy debt to Ozu (who I'm not familiar with) but I definitely want to see it again.

Steve Shasta (Steve Shasta), Monday, 8 May 2006 19:00 (eighteen years ago) link

I feel like I was in minority as well, but I loved Cafe Lumiere. It was intended to be a tribute to Ozu.

TRG (TRG), Monday, 8 May 2006 19:49 (eighteen years ago) link

Three Times was ok. Loved parts of it but kind of feel like it may be one of his weaker films. He lost me with the last segment.

TRG (TRG), Tuesday, 16 May 2006 16:56 (eighteen years ago) link

five months pass...
Three Times is out on DVD. I liked the third segment best despite my suspicion that he's better with concubines than modern women (Flowers of Shanghai vs Cafe Lumiere). The first segment is a protracted variation on the soldier-meets-civilian meet-cute scenaerio; the second, filmed as a silent movie, makes me wish he'd abandon dialogue altogether.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn (Alfred Soto), Monday, 6 November 2006 01:06 (eighteen years ago) link

i like the first third of Three Times - mainly, i suppose, because i like looking at cute, well dressed people smoking cigarettes but it did seem to have some kind of emotional weight. as for the second section, i agree with Alfred, he should have jettisoned the intertitle dialogues and made it a silent silent-movie. the third section though is so bad it retrospectively ruined the good things that had preceded it. there's a thin line between still & meaningful and something just beiing completely vacuous. it makes you think you had given him too much credit up til then.

i guess i would like to see his other films so i can test this.

jed_ (jed), Monday, 6 November 2006 19:29 (eighteen years ago) link

and I vote for the second segment.

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Tuesday, 7 November 2006 14:58 (eighteen years ago) link

three months pass...
shoul i go see the (5 hour!) "A City of Sadness" later this month?

jed_, Sunday, 4 March 2007 14:36 (seventeen years ago) link

isn't it 4? It might be a bit of a trial if you haven't seen Hou before. But yes.

Dr Morbius, Monday, 5 March 2007 14:31 (seventeen years ago) link

Hmm 2h 37 minutes - a misprint on the brochure has it listed at 297 minutes. i guess 2 1/2 hours is fine.

jed_, Monday, 5 March 2007 23:24 (seventeen years ago) link

ah this was a good old ILF thread...

ryan, Wednesday, 7 March 2007 05:57 (seventeen years ago) link

one year passes...

Armond nailed Flight of the Red Balloon for me, I'm afraid (except he liked Binoche more):

http://www.nypress.com/21/14/film/ArmondWhite2.cfm

I've really been underwhelmed post-Flowers of Shanghai, save for the 'silent' chapter of 3x.

Dr Morbius, Friday, 23 May 2008 15:00 (sixteen years ago) link

four weeks pass...

Godfrey Cheshire, whelmed:

Hou is a genius, it is said; therefore every film of his is a work of art. In this case, though I'm a longtime admirer and defender of the director, I must beg to differ. Hou's latest strikes me as a trifle, more perplexing than interesting, with inherent problems that are bound up with the fact that it's the first movie he has made outside of Asia....

So why would he go off to France and make a Juliette Binoche movie? There are two primary reasons, I think, and neither is particularly salutary....

http://www.indyweek.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=oid%3A259868

Dr Morbius, Friday, 20 June 2008 21:26 (sixteen years ago) link

four months pass...

Pokey in spots, and Binoche's dye job makes her look like she's auditioning to play Courtney Love, but I rather loved this, especially since the original film is oh-so-precious. Rewatching certain scenes between the three main characters in Binoche's apartments, I was struck by how wittily Hou pans subtly between the child and the adults; it's like Janes' What Maisie Knew -- this child barely cognizant of what these confused adults are up to; yet there's enough distance between his perceptions and ours that the two women's interactions are regarded quizzically, affectionately.

Alfred, Lord Sotosyn, Wednesday, 22 October 2008 03:00 (sixteen years ago) link

one year passes...

i think one reason i love slow movies is that i sometimes something in the movie will send off on a 5 minute day dream and i wont have really missed anything plot wise. i kind of like it when a movie does not demand my attention.
― ryan (ryan), Monday, 21 March 2005 01:45 (5 years ago)

neglected slow cinema wisdom

hsh is super great

nakhchivan, Monday, 14 June 2010 13:34 (fourteen years ago) link

hhh :/

nakhchivan, Monday, 14 June 2010 13:34 (fourteen years ago) link

from his 00s stuff, millenium mambo was amazing (unjustly neglected), coffee time was very good and red balloon wd probably have been completely insufferable if entrusted to anyone else

nakhchivan, Monday, 14 June 2010 13:39 (fourteen years ago) link

http://stargamer1138.files.wordpress.com/2009/11/triple-h-7.jpg

♹♹ (dyao), Monday, 14 June 2010 13:42 (fourteen years ago) link

red balloon playing here in two days - good or just not completely insufferable?

♹♹ (dyao), Monday, 14 June 2010 13:45 (fourteen years ago) link

dyao successfully triangulates the asian minimalism / dixie proletkult demographics ^^

anything by hou is worth seeing, he is that great

red balloon is a rly weak idea for a movie but he does his best

nakhchivan, Monday, 14 June 2010 13:49 (fourteen years ago) link

"anything by hou is worth seeing, he is that great"

otm

City Of Sadness and The Puppetmaster are so perrfect.

Zeno, Thursday, 17 June 2010 09:21 (fourteen years ago) link

one month passes...

juliette binoche is also wonderful in red balloon, but i agree the movie is really weak -- my fave hou would be a time to live and a time to die -- best $5 i ever spent on a chinatown dvd

markholmes, Wednesday, 28 July 2010 02:59 (fourteen years ago) link

one year passes...

am i alone in preferring his later/'urban' films? i'm going to queue up daughter of the nile, next; idk whether it's just that I don't have the same appetite for historical films but I think I 'like' the 2000s stuff more, whereas I more 'admire' what I've seen of the earlier, bigger-deal films (puppetmaster, dust in the wind).

& yeah I know I probably oughtta get around to CoS/FoS before I start this kind of conversation

the contemporary jazz guitar gettin mad liberated (schlump), Wednesday, 26 October 2011 00:15 (thirteen years ago) link

ten months pass...

The Puppetmaster is a real paint-drying film for me; I have no idea how I stayed awake in atheater in the '90s. Partly to do with my hating most puppetry from any culture?

Flowers of Shanghai is a much tougher watch at home too (esp on a crappy tape), but still easily my fave of his.

Pangborn to be Wilde (Dr Morbius), Wednesday, 5 September 2012 19:08 (twelve years ago) link

yeah i found the puppetmaster drier than most seemed to. & the jacket said HOU-LARIOUS!, which didn't help. the puppetry = some of the best parts, though!

i've still never caught flowers of shanghai or city of sadness - i had the impression that they were both super-long, where as only one is, i think. but a cinema viewing would be nice.

very sexual album (schlump), Wednesday, 5 September 2012 20:06 (twelve years ago) link

Puppetry is usually the best part of almost any movie it's in. The 400 Blows is one of the only exceptions I can even think of atm.

Eric H., Wednesday, 5 September 2012 20:07 (twelve years ago) link

I'm in the FOS/GSG camp.

a regina spektor is haunting europe (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 5 September 2012 20:17 (twelve years ago) link

one year passes...

i really wanted to love city of sadness but found it far too long, and not meaty enough. i did really like a time to live and die (saw it twice, and liked it much better 2nd time round, maybe i need to do that with all his films) but this i just found dreary. took me about an hour to get into its rhythm, but found it impossible to really navigate all the characters when i did. maybe its this film, or maybe its just him, but his style can be too delicate and slight. beautiful and poetic, sure, but i wanted more than that - everything was as if it was rendered in miniature, but it makes it hard to get any sense of an emotional arc. its all just played at one pitch almost. found it easy to like particular scenes, but difficult to get a handle on the bigger picture. did love the idea of rendering every letter thats read out on the screen though - that was a lovely touch. a time to live somehow seemed better as his simple style suited the relatively simple story (though it was still epic in scope).

StillAdvance, Sunday, 24 August 2014 19:20 (ten years ago) link

Was there too. There was this tension in the film between the telling of the history and the telling of that family's history that seemed unresolved by Hou. When the deaf man and his wife-to-be start conversing independently of the rest of the family -- who are talking about the political situation, big boy stuff -- and the two talk instead about their lives and the music playing you are clearly seeing what Hou is more interested in. Or at least the terrain he feels more comfortable in, because the bigger picture details did get lost over time. He never found any equilibrium here.

Its a film I'd watch again someday - it was interesting to depict such a turbulent time for a nation in such a non-epic manner.

One other thing I'd remark on is how 80s those keyboard stabs sounded to me. You can so date the movie through that, its how I amuse myself.

xyzzzz__, Sunday, 24 August 2014 23:05 (ten years ago) link

i found myself stuck between frustration that a subject like this DID deserve the big epic treatment and trying to see the reason for why hou wouldnt take that approach. neither was particularly satisfying. his small-detail minutiae focus can be riveting (eg a time to live...), it can also feel like a safe option. avoiding obvious big drama might seem brave or clever but it also just seems like an easy way out, and one more about preserving auteur style over what the material is desperately crying out for. if there were plenty of other epics already telling this story, i might think a small-focus movie like this to be fine, but as there arent loads about the subject, it seemed like a missed opportunity.

ha - i loved the 80s music. it was actually one of the easiest things to like about the film. he has a good ear for music.... though there WAS something rather 80s-arthouse about the film as a whole (same dated feel i get from watching something like the double life of veronique these days)

StillAdvance, Sunday, 24 August 2014 23:35 (ten years ago) link

i found myself stuck between frustration that a subject like this DID deserve the big epic treatment and trying to see the reason for why hou wouldnt take that approach.

Well he is more interested in the interior life - the life of family houses and rooms, the life of a deaf mute - than what is happening more widely. Thinking more again you see that table where the father is eating, and the film pretty much ends with that scene of the eldest surviving the turbulent times. There he is, eating...Somewhat analogous to having the grandmother die at the end of A Time to Live..., the eldest outliving her son/daughter (can't remember which side she is on).

xyzzzz__, Monday, 25 August 2014 10:41 (ten years ago) link

might double feature cute girl and the puppetmaster next weekend, haven't seen either.

adam, Saturday, 6 September 2014 15:29 (ten years ago) link

There's been talk in All Purpose NYC ILX Film Snob Thread

, Saturday, 6 September 2014 15:30 (ten years ago) link

I'm watching Good Men, Good Women for the first time. Its fucking w/space and time is unexpected!

guess that bundt gettin eaten (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 7 September 2014 22:08 (ten years ago) link

brand new print of Flowers of Shanghai on the big screen in Queens last night, stunning reds and golds, glow from the gas lamps too. This retro will tour to Berkeley and presumably elsewhere.

http://www.fandor.com/keyframe/daily-also-like-life-the-films-of-hou-hsiao-hsien

son of a lewd monk (Dr Morbius), Saturday, 13 September 2014 16:10 (ten years ago) link

Was it sold out?

Colossal Propellerhead (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 13 September 2014 17:02 (ten years ago) link

seeing it tonight. half wary, half excited. the interviews he has given about the film make me go for the former. like 'i just cut out everything that might tell you anything just for the hell of it'.

StillAdvance, Tuesday, 2 February 2016 09:33 (eight years ago) link

i watched this not caring about the plot beyond the basics. i gave up trying to follow it. but i found this enjoyable. and surprisingly light in how it feels as i was expecting it to be austere and heavy going. but it was sort of mythic and almost fairy tale-like. but i still didnt pay much attention to the narrative - it seemed inconsequential and pointless task. but also as i read so much about how ravishing it was to look at. which is actually where i found the film a let down. it looks like HD TV really. compositionally, i think the appeal was more to do with the set design than the cinematography, which seemed adequate but lacking in his usual control/deliberation. the crystalline, ultra high def images lacked anything interesting texturally. it looked like a quality TV mini series, the black and white sequence at the start even more so. a lot of the fights were presented as awkwardly as the grandmaster, though i appreciate the attempt to do something new there. its enigmatic, enjoyably light-footed, and strangely intriguing, but something i would file as a modest, low budget, late period addition to someones filmography rather than one of the great films of recent memory. i cant help thinking a lot of the praise poured onto it is a kind of compensation for his older/better films not being shown/known more.

StillAdvance, Wednesday, 3 February 2016 10:43 (eight years ago) link

Best bit was the panning revealing and hiding again the assassin listening through the curtains. I almost fell asleep several times but in sort of a nice way and wasn't helped by having to travel across to Edinburgh and back before work having missed it at the GFT last week.

ewar woowar (or something), Wednesday, 3 February 2016 12:10 (eight years ago) link

it looks like HD TV really.

The gap between film and TV look has narrowed considerably over the last 15 years. Hou has probably gone with the times, or the tech. Its hard to know how well it might look compared as the older films (as I saw in the BFI retro) aren't in as good a condition. But for what it is I think decisions as to what is shot (and what is kept out too), angles of light etc. and mixed shooting settings - not only B&W but also that scene where the image is made grainier. That was all well-handled. I think the guy is in control of his materials.

The appeal - well you'd expect a Hou film to be well shot (its done in a way you don't like), to have as few a cliche's as poss (compared to other wuxia). Its just a very good film that had an award - which is wider recognition for a director that is pretty much well-known already in art house circles. I wouldn't call it overcompensation. Its top 10 stuff in most years.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 4 February 2016 13:28 (eight years ago) link

youre right about the decreased gap between film and tv. but it made me think a bit in terms of the look of something like raul ruiz' mysteries of lisbon. the production values felt more tv something like say, house of flying daggers. i kept thinking someone should tap HHH to do a long form series, like a wuxia twin peaks. im surprised that it was shot on 35mm (suppose it shows that you can make film look like digital tv and vice versa). but there was def something slight about this compared to what else ive seen of his - it def had that stillness, and moments of opaqueness, but it didnt seem to come with as much meaning. that might come if i watch it again maybe, not sure.

im glad hes getting accolades. obv if youre 'into film', you will prob know of him, but hes not nearly as famous as other east asian auteurs.

StillAdvance, Thursday, 4 February 2016 17:11 (eight years ago) link

i think im thinking texturally, or in terms of the grain, as well as attention to lighting, and atmosphere, etc.

compare this still from city of sadness to the assassin -

http://www.davidbordwell.net/blog/wp-content/uploads/City-of-Sadness-400.jpg

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-5f7BVKfXipQ/Vciw4l4gJDI/AAAAAAAE8qc/x3ru511ewII/s1600/assassin7.jpg

StillAdvance, Thursday, 4 February 2016 17:20 (eight years ago) link

Anybody seen the wuxia tv shows? I seen some trailers and was amazed because the movie-like quality of them seems far beyond even American tv shows.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 4 February 2016 18:10 (eight years ago) link

I haven't seen Mysteries of Lisbon but he is so diff to HHH. 'TV production values' vs film - again, I wonder how much of a gap there is in the first place between either of them.

From the two screenshots I take your point but City of Sadness does, iirc, evoke a very different mood in its intentions and its a very different story - which I think why at least trying to follow some of the story's strands (and I didn't follow all of them) might be worthwhile.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 4 February 2016 20:41 (eight years ago) link

It's posit StillAdvance means that MOL has the leisurely pace of, say, Berlin Alexanderplatz.

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 4 February 2016 20:48 (eight years ago) link

posit = possible

The burrito of ennui (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Thursday, 4 February 2016 20:48 (eight years ago) link

i only mentioned MOL as it was also a tv project IIRC but i think the thing with the assassin is that the image is very naked. or made to seem very naked (ive read some reviews since seeing it comment on it being like a painting come to life but i would say its more just like a digital photograph come to life, which im not sure really suits it as its meant to be a period piece). made me think of inland empire actually. i know the lighting was all natural, but idk, i like a bit of artifice, so maybe its just personal preference (i feel a bit like QT complaining about digital projection being TV, but i think its about the choices made in the shooting and the lighting, not the projection).

i still need to watch berlin alexanderplatz.

StillAdvance, Friday, 5 February 2016 10:35 (eight years ago) link

its more just like a digital photograph come to life, which im not sure really suits it as its meant to be a period piece

Period piece needn't mean you sould exclude digital.

Some of the colours felt oversaturated.

xyzzzz__, Friday, 5 February 2016 11:40 (eight years ago) link

I think this film's status as a 'period film' is quite complex (especially when there are fantasy elements in play) - it has the feel of a retold childhood fable, a remembrance of a story rather than the story itself, and so the brightness of the colours seems an appropriate way of expressing memory, and wonderment.

Chicamaw (Ward Fowler), Friday, 5 February 2016 12:14 (eight years ago) link

two months pass...

So, this is a masterpiece! Reminded me a lot of Amour Fou in it's depiction of a rotten, codified, millieu. Also, reading up on the history behind it, the whole thin is based on fact, it seems. It's really not that complicated.

Frederik B, Monday, 18 April 2016 11:53 (eight years ago) link

one month passes...
one year passes...

Daughter of the Nile has a 30th anniversary 4K restoration opening in NY this week

https://quadcinema.com/film/daughter-of-the-nile/

ice cream social justice (Dr Morbius), Monday, 23 October 2017 20:47 (seven years ago) link

watched tai pei story last week; every shot is gorgeous

flopson, Monday, 23 October 2017 21:28 (seven years ago) link

one year passes...

I really liked The Puppetmaster. It was definitely made more interesting for me by the mixing of casual narration in voice-over and interview scenes with the historical storytelling. The “almost like life” puppet show scenes and opera scenes were also mesmerizing. Didn’t think the narrative was confusing at all (unlike The Assassin). Can relate to what was said above about his films being delicate/miniaturized, the preference for mid- and long-range shots really add emotional distance to the events of the stories

enjoyed reading this thread

Dan S, Friday, 2 November 2018 23:43 (six years ago) link

I used the search function to find this thread, was disappointed to realize I posted this to ILF. surprising to me that there's no Hou Hsiao-Hsien thread on ILE

Dan S, Saturday, 3 November 2018 00:15 (six years ago) link

three months pass...

I've seen The Assassin twice now, I'm still not sure I really understand it, but it is a beautiful film

Dan S, Sunday, 3 February 2019 03:10 (five years ago) link

Only saw the one time when it came out but would like to see again. Where is it streaming? Only thing I see available is Daughter of the Nile on Kanopy. Actually just watched Three Times about a week ago on Mubi and it was incredible.

Only a Factory URL (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 3 February 2019 03:19 (five years ago) link

Seems like I missed whole Metrograph retro and don’t think I can get there tomorrow for the last day.

Only a Factory URL (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 3 February 2019 03:29 (five years ago) link

I want to see Three Times again, I remember liking it the first time, especially the 1966 sequence. haven't seen Daughter of the Nile yet. The Assassin is available on netflix dvd. the quality of the dvd I rented this time was superior (I thought) to that I saw initially

Dan S, Sunday, 3 February 2019 03:30 (five years ago) link

I know dvds are not something most people consider watching today, but without them, at least for the moment, I think viewers are missing out on a lot of great classic films

Dan S, Sunday, 3 February 2019 03:37 (five years ago) link

Yeah, I know I am.

Only a Factory URL (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 3 February 2019 03:39 (five years ago) link

The Assassin seems like a very different film to me this time. wondering what it will feel like again in 5 years

Dan S, Sunday, 3 February 2019 04:30 (five years ago) link

I can recommend googling the names of characters in The Assassin. Some of them are historical characters, whose stories don't end there.

Frederik B, Sunday, 3 February 2019 08:03 (five years ago) link

four years pass...

Figuring out subs for French restoration of the 'HHH: A Portrait of Hou Hsiao-Hsien' documentary. Love this segement: pic.twitter.com/bd5f13eZOk

— mmcc (@mattmccrac) August 17, 2022

xyzzzz__, Monday, 7 August 2023 14:08 (one year ago) link

Having completed the subtitle project and working now on packaging them and the video together properly, please enjoy Hou Hsiao-hsien's magnificent singing at KTV.

"Cheers friends, let it all out!"https://t.co/6rqqjCGJuc pic.twitter.com/tBrtsxr2LM

— mmcc (@mattmccrac) August 2, 2023

xyzzzz__, Monday, 7 August 2023 14:08 (one year ago) link

two months pass...

that's a loss but he seems to be doing what's best for his health and i hope he has a long happy retirement

no gap tree for old men (Noodle Vague), Wednesday, 25 October 2023 18:42 (one year ago) link

Hope this sad news inspires a push to finally get decent physical media editions of things like Puppetmaster and City of Sadness out there.

The Assassin was a hell of a film to go out on.

Ward Fowler, Wednesday, 25 October 2023 19:52 (one year ago) link

https://www.taiwanplus.com/shows/culture/between-the-tides-taiwans-new-wave-classics-and-beyond

dust in the wind (and other non-HHH classics) available for streaming here

, Wednesday, 1 November 2023 15:32 (one year ago) link

"Before he was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, he had often shared with us that his love for films has become purer."

Thank you so much for your films, Hou.

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 2 November 2023 17:20 (one year ago) link


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