reverse shot presents

Tsai Ming-liang Symposium
Introduction

Interview with
Tsai Ming-liang


-Goodbye Dragon Inn
-Andrew Tracy

-Nick Pinkerton

-Rebels of the Neon God
-The Hole
-The River
-The Skywalk is Gone
-Vive L'Amour
-What Time Is It There?

-A Whiff of Reality


New York Film Festival
-Saraband
-Tarnation
-The Holy Girl
-Tropical Malady
-In The Battlefields
-The World
-Or
-Undertow
-Bad Education
-The Big Red One...
-Notre Musique
-Café Lumière
-Keane
-Moolaadé
-Sideways
-Vera Drake
-Infernal Affairs


New Releases
-Closer
-Alfie
-Birth
-The Assassination of
  Richard Nixon

-The Grudge
-The Machinist


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Tsai Ming-liang Symposium
New York Film Festival

Not with a Whimper but a Tsai…

When it's said that an artist-filmmaker, painter, poet, performer-“defines a generation,” it can either refer to his attempts to reflect on the behavior of his times on his canvas, or it can be mere fortunate happenstance: that the artist's particular sensibility merged with that of the audience and created an inadvertent discourse. Of course, this is usually a cliché, trotted out to either prematurely honor an artist who has happened to tap into the zeitgeist, or to praise in retrospect one who seemed to blaze some sort of trail in his medium. In film, it's particularly overused: Fellini, Bergman in the Sixties; Scorsese, Altman, Bertolucci in the Seventies, etc. But who are these generations, and do they need to be “defined” above and beyond the political realities of their eras? In current cinephilic terms, the new generation is in desperate search for an auteur who will perhaps “define” it all-our globalized world has shrunk and redefined the rules of dissociation and alienation, East has met West in a tenuous pas de deux of common cultural icons and disparate social materialities. If American films were more honest (a concept in Hollywood now so rare as to seem absurd), we'd be seeing the same pop culture-infused images of distanciation and self-obfuscation that now permeate so much of the cinema of the new Asian auteurs. We Westerners look for a mirror of our own cultural displacement and can only find it in Japan's Kiyoshi Kurosawa and Hirokazu Kore-eda, Thailand's Pen-ek Ratanaruang and Apichatpong Weearasethakul, Taiwan's Hou Hsiao-hsien and Tsai Ming-liang, the latter the subject of our new issue.

The 47-year old filmmaker, born in Malaysia, has directed six theatrical features, thres short films, and two works for television, including My New Friends, a documentary about AIDS in Taiwan that must keep the identity of its gay interview subjects a secret from the camera lens. Rigorously aestheticized, Tsai's output thus far have been composed of remarkably lucid, stringently funny, deathly terrifying minimalist spectacles of suspended misery and tacit longing. It's fair to say he's never quite burst through to the upper echelons of art-house success (let alone the mainstream), although his consistent placement at the tops of so many of our writers' best lists (and netflix queues) proves that he is nevertheless a force to be reckoned with. Comparisons to Antonioni are unavoidable yet negligible; there's a purity to Tsai's compositions of alienation that even Antonioni could never manage, coming as he did during a much hyped period of filmmaking fraught with expectations. Tsai's just sort of drifted in unassumingly, with a wry smile on his face rather than a pained grimace. His new-ish film Goodbye Dragon Inn, especially delectable for us hopeless film lovers, expands out to realms beyond its dilapidated movie theater setting-even in glorifying film-watching, Tsai spirals out to the universal, uncovering essential human truths. Much more than a film geek's un-guilty pleasure, Goodbye Dragon Inn furthers and thickens a proposal he's been making to his viewers since he began directing movies. If you pay close attention-to the whispers, to the empty seats and corridors, to the bathroom echoes, the raindrops that splatter like tears around the peripheries of every frame, to his muse Lee Kang-sheng's gorgeous, impenetrable visage-you will discover something with which every generation truly seeks to define itself and of which Antonioni could have only dreamed: true love.

READ THE INTERVIEW

………………………

Program Notes

Are we the only ones tired of exhausting film festival coverage? Instantaneous reactions from critics on international whirlwinds, watching seven movies a day, remembering only bits and pieces of them, yet trying to formulate pithy insights as to their caliber; cramming 17 films into one 1200 word article, attempting some sort of best-of-the-fest overview but ultimately ending up so pissed off from the long lines, packed tight schedules, and lack of proper sleep, that their pieces end up as whimpering tracts about how hard it is to be a critic, to sit in darkened rooms all day with pen and paper, just wishing they could be out frolicking in the sunlight. At REVERSE SHOT, as we had for the 2003 edition of the New York Film Festival, we've chosen a more scaled-down selection of films from the festival roster, sacrificed quantity for quality, and maybe got some actual cinematic revelations in there. How else to tease out the mythical ambiguities of Apichatpong Weerasethakul's Tropical Malady, devour the global angst of Jia Zhangke's The World, gauge the proper moral reaction to Jonathan Caouette's Tarnation, or sing the praises of a small, undistributed gem like the debut from Lebanese director Danielle Arbid, In the Battlefields?

Of course, being situated in New York, it's out of necessity that we cover our own local festival, which is run out of the Film Society of Lincoln Center. With its comparatively small programming, NYFF has always had to deal with its small (or too large)-minded detractors who would apparently rather be ensconced in the meat-market mentality of a Cannes or a Toronto. Yet the small selection of films made by its thoughtful five-person committee almost always ensures that you're getting a fairly comprehensive cross-section of the year's international cream of the crop. (We can even forgive them for being enablers year after year to Todd Solondz…) There's no mammoth, bound program book to rifle through in order to decode which films are worth spending your precious time seeing (all effusively praised by their committees to the point of ludicrousness: Danny Deckchair has “frothy wit, a spot-on sense of pacing, and an eye for vivid, transporting images”…really? Love Actually “glitters with inventiveness and gives us the distinct feeling of snuggling up to someone we love on a perfect winter's night”…truly? Thank you, Toronto Catalog!). No competition for pointless awards-and therefore no dreadful “out of competition” events and galas for things like Shrek 2 and the latest fallen auteur flick. So we won't trouble you anymore with musings on the festival's overall structure, shortcomings, attributes, scheduling conflicts, or rain delays… let's just get to the films.

READ THE NYFF REVIEWS

-MICHAEL KORESKY

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