| Index | 8 reviews in total |
33 out of 36 people found the following review useful:
THE DREAM CITY THAT EDWARD YANG BUILT, 9 July 1999
Author:
David Lie from Singapore
It is unlikely that Edward Yang would quarrel with those who described him
as the Antonioni of the East. But this kind of comparison is perhaps more
damaging than helpful since it only engenders perceptions that have little
or nothing to do with the filmmaker. If we are to understand Yang at all,
we must allow his works to speak for themselves--they must succeed or fail
on their own terms. "The Terrorizer" is one of Edward Yang's most
accomplished works. In style, concerns, and methodology it differs
significantly from the masterworks of Antonioni. Whereas Antonioni
prefers
to work with a narrower canvas, choosing to develop his characters until
they achieve self-awareness, Yang seems to eschew such conventions,
offering
instead a logic akin to the dream world. "The Terrorizer" is indeed
constructed very much like Chuang-Tzu's tale about a man who is unsure if
he
was dreaming that he was a butterfly or a butterfly who was dreaming that
he
was a man.
It would be a disservice to think that the ending of The Terrorizer is
anything like O. Henry. It is perhaps more accurate to describe the
ending
as a faux denouement. The use of not a single but a double dream suggests
that Yang is fully aware of his Chinese roots even when he is consciously
quoting an outsider like Antonioni. It also indicates that he is less
interested in the psychology of social behavior than in the actions taken
by
individuals and the effects they have on one another throughout the social
network, regardless of their relations to each other. It is to this end
that several couples in an unnamed metropolis of Taiwan are examined: a
photographer and his girlfriend living off the wealth of their family; a
teenage hustler and her pimp on a downward spiral of crime; an unhappily
married novelist who embarks on an affair with a past lover. These three
couples, in turn, are connected in some way, tangibly or peripherally, to
a
policeman, a law enforcer who is powerless to hold the city together, to
keep it from coming apart. It is little wonder that everyone is
constantly
forging new relationships or alliances in a city where obsolescence is the
rule.
Just as Antonioni uses dislocation as a means of conveying alienation,
Yang
chooses to use absentation--the absence of things--as a thematic device.
Throughout the narrative one is reminded of the absence of fathers--both
socially and politically. It is the absence of leadership. Elsewhere,
absentation is employed when the photographer decides to turn an apartment
into one huge darkroom which denies him the reality of time while
permitting
him to create a world of his own. At one point, a teenage girl whom he
temporarily harbors asked him if it is day or night. When the camera
finally peeps outside the apartment Yang gives us neither day nor night
but
that brief moment in time when light gives way to darkness or darkness
breaks into light. It is here that Yang best captures the logic of that
dream world: his protagonists are merely phantoms suspended in time. It
is
the absence of time. Throughout the narrative one is sometimes puzzled by
the seemingly lack of explanations: the initial breakup of the
photographer
and his girlfriend (witnessed over the soundtrack of "Smoke Gets in Your
Eye"); the return of the photographer's stolen cameras; the breakup of the
married couple; the status of the policeman with no emotional or physical
ties. It is the absence of elucidation. Unlike the works of Antonioni
where there is always a central character whose viewpoint mirrors our own,
functioning as a filter of reality, Yang denies us of such privilege. The
impossibility of identifying with any character may be disorientating but
it
also serves as a metaphor of a city that has lost its moral compass. It is
the absence of a central viewpoint. Absentation is clearly an effective
tool in exploring the void that lies at the heart of modern culture--it is
the black hole of the human condition.
When the film finally concludes it matters little what portion of it is
real
or a dream. Or for that matter who the dreamer really is. Fiction is
perhaps no more than merely dreams, perfectly realized, and cinema the
greatest dream machine ever built.
9 out of 9 people found the following review useful:
Yin and Yang balancing act in modern Taipei, 15 December 2005
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Author:
gmwhite from Brisbane, Australia
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
In the following I hope to write a review of Edward Yang's 'Terrorizer'
that does justice to its presentation of the twin themes of
interconnectedness and disconnectedness, which move through the work
like the forces of Yin and Yang.
Superficially, the movie deals with three couples in states of loose
adherence. The characters, and the unstable relationships between them,
are altered through tangential, almost incidental interactions among
themselves.
Firstly, there is a photographer, evidently the son of a wealthy
family, and his girlfriend, who he deserts for most of the film to
follow his fascination with a rather unlikable Eurasian woman (White
Chick) who he initially photographs fleeing from the police with a male
accomplice. This fascination is the reason for the photographer's break
with his girlfriend. He goes on to rent the apartment she was escaping
from, for use as a dark room. White Chick will later link up with a
boyfriend to perpetrate a series of sex-scams, forming the second
rather unstable 'couple' of the film, joined by the common pursuit of
easy money rather than romantic attachment. The third ill-starred pair
is a married couple, a doctor (Li-li Chong) and an authoress (Chou
Yufen). The doctor has been waiting for a promotion and appears
frustrated in its delay. His wife, a novelist, feels that her world as
a housewife is growing smaller and smaller. How can she possibly write
under such circumstances, she asks. A budding affair with her
ex-colleague is further undermining the marriage.
--- The following discusses major plot points in detail ---
Technology seems to play a major role in this dystopia. The cameras of
the rich young man link him to White Chick, prompting a break in his
own romantic relationship. Later, when White Chick returns to the
apartment she had been fleeing, and finds her image blown up to
enormous size on the wall, she faints, waking to spend some time in the
sealed world of the darkened room, in conversation with the
photographer. When he falls asleep, she leaves and steals his cameras,
hoping to sell them, returning them perhaps because she has found them
too hard to sell quickly. Again the cameras, circumstantially related
to a dissolving relationship.
A prank phone call (by the female criminal) sets off Chou Yufen's
suspicions of her husband's fidelity. Their relationship was already on
the rocks, but this simple call pushes it to breaking point. Technology
has intruded, albeit arbitrarily, to 'break the camel's back', as it
were, not actively causing a rupture in relations, but facilitating it.
the brief connection of two people through a phone line precipitates a
separation.
The last piece of technology, a pistol, is active in the last sequences
of the movie, a rather dreamy set of scenarios which may reflect the
desires and despair of the abandoned doctor, or be actual dreams of his
wife, at the time in bed with her lover. (My initial view of the three
scenarios presented was that the first two were imagined by the doctor:
1) Should he just kill his wife's lover unannounced? This idea is
rejected because it contains no direct confrontation with the lover, or
his unfaithful wife. 2) The next scenario involves just such a
confrontation, though he cannot bring himself to shoot his wife.
Instead, he goes after the woman who made the prank phone call. The
police intrude upon this trajectory as he comes face-to-face with White
Chick, since the handgun belongs to Li-Li Chong's detective friend,
with whom he is indeed staying after a night of heavy drinking. After
he envisages how this course of action will unfold, he opts to shoot
himself instead, 3)which I think actually occurs. Unless, according to
another theory, these are all dreamed by the wife, who does indeed wake
with a start when the final shot is heard).
--- End of discussion of plot points ---
This complicated tangle of trajectories is portrayed in the typically
cool, disconnected, Taiwanese style, with naturalistic sound only, and
no music except that which is played on radios etc. The manner in which
the stories are presented and connected parallels their content, for
there is no consistent point-of-view presented that could link us to
any one character, and the editing tosses us from one situation to
another, leaving it to the viewer to make the connections between the
scenes, and in turn, the characters themselves. I suspect that this
manner of presentation was itself designed to convey certain realities
of life in Taipei, a rough mixture of fortuitous coincidence and
disconnectedness, a situation which the appliances designed to make
life easier only serve to compound further.
This is a film that I found enjoyable to 'assemble', and which rewarded
concentrated viewing, even while avoiding answering many of the
questions it raised. I suspect that further viewings may only raise
other questions rather than bring me closer to answers. 'Terrorizers'
is very much an art film, and very much a Taiwanese film. I would
recommended it most to those who already profess an interest in this
combination, such as lovers of Taiwanese New Wave films generally.
Those who like Antonioni's 'Blow Up' may also find some points of
interest, as well as several interesting parallels. In sum: a mature
work from an original and talented 'auteur'.
10 out of 12 people found the following review useful:
The other side of Edward Yang., 20 June 2001
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Author:
Alice Liddel (-darragh@excite.com) from dublin, ireland
Edward Yang is one of the few filmmakers who can made the present-day seem like a dystopia. He is often compared to Antonioni: this is his 'Blow-up' - an ascetically formal, fragmented murder mystery stumbled on by a photographer. In his use of dream narrative and a character who writes a mystery novel, Yang goes beyond the Italian in narrative obscurity. 'The Terroriser' shares many themes with his more accessible masterpieces 'A Brighter Summer Day' and 'Yi-Yi' - the alienation of capitalist, urban life; the alienation of relationships and aimlessness of youth; the mind-numbing compromises and betrayals in the workplace - but in a framework that coldly precludes identification.
7 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Masterly, 28 April 2010
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Author:
ky_chong
"The Terrorizers" is I think one of Edward Yang's most successful
films. In fact I like it even more than "Yi Yi", his 2000
Cannes-winning 3-hour feature, his last. The thing about "The
Terrorizers" is that it's constructed like a gigantic jigsaw puzzle,
into which pieces fall gradually into place as the movie unfolds. The
pacing and construction of this movie is as far away from Classic
Hollywood Narrative as imaginable. That's why many American viewers
(one IMDb reviewer kept insisting he got it - but it's clear he hadn't)
are lost. The impulse of the narrative is trying to make sense of what
is happening and - towards the end - finding if, as the novel suggests,
art will mirror life. It is thus a brilliant suspense movie too. The
best I can compare it to are to the 1970s French "Nouvelle Vague"
cinema and Antonioni himself which Yang is influenced by. Take
something like Alain Resnais's self-reflexivity and cross it with
Antonioni themes and you are likely to get a hybrid that is close to
"The Terrorizers".
The film recreates urban Taipei life in the 1980s very closely - how
people talked then and the likes - but that is not its primary appeal.
If at the end of the film you do "get" this
post-modernist-pastiche-like work, as its last jigsaw piece fall into
place, you will definitely feel something wrenching into your rational
mind. Maybe a few years later, when someone mentions this movie, it
will ring a bell in you. I gave "The Terrorizers" a full 10/10 rating
because I believe it is already a classic of the New Taiwan Cinema.
Tsai Ming-liang's "Vive l'amour" (1994), though it won the Golden Lion,
isn't more brilliant that this predecessor made eight years earlier
(not to mention Yang has less fetish fixations than Tsai, who can
appear indulgent). "The Terrorizers" can best be called an explosive,
subversive work hidden behind a deceptive facade of urbane restraint.
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
A Nutshell Review: The Terrorizers, 6 March 2011
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Author:
DICK STEEL from Singapore
The opening film of this retrospective a few days ago, The Terrorizers
was presented in a gorgeous restored digital transfer that is beautiful
to gawk at every frame, and in essence what would have probably been
seen during its first ever debut back in 1986. It's not cheap nor easy
to have a film remastered and restored to get rid of pops, cackles and
dirt, or to readjust its colour grading, as seen during the promotional
clip on its restoration before the film proper, and it's really an
excellent job done given the tremendous amount of effort behind the
scene.
Edward Yang's third feature film, co-written with Hsiao Yeh, may have
given the audience an ultimate red herring with an action oriented
introduction complete with cops and robbers and a shootout, only for
that to serve as just about the only real action sequence in this film
that's steeped in what would be a relatively violent outcome by the
time the end credits rolled. The Terrorizers tells a myriad of
inter-weaving story lines involving a myriad of characters, such as
Wang An's delinquent Eurasian girl who runs a call girl scam where she
robs her clientele in hotel rooms and a photographer's obsession with
her when he snaps her escape from the cops.
But the storyline that just begged for attention, is something similar
like his first two films that dealt with the breakdown in relationships
against the backdrop of modernity, and how modern life and its
expectations chip at passion and romance, where couples rarely emerge
unscathed from failure to communicate their true intentions. I suppose
it is akin to the filmmaker's way of constant warning, given a trilogy
now focused on this aspect, that to have emotions kept within oneself
would only pave way for a massive blowout when the last straw is
reached, and this offers no chance whatsoever for reconciliation, only
destruction, and the humiliation that comes along with it.
We see it all coming from the first time the couple of Yue Fen (Cora
Miao) and her husband Li Zhong (Lee Li Chun) got introduced, where the
former's writer's block complaint becomes an avenue to be chided by her
husband, who deemed her issue rather unimportant given that it is a
work of fiction, and not life and death. Clearly this lack of
sensitivity was the seed sowed, before a random cataclysmic event
evolves this into her wanting to leave the matrimonial home for a place
where she can get some escape and seek out inspiration, which turned
out to be nothing more than seeking out an ex-lover to carry out an
affair with.
While you may want to sympathize with the husband, wait. Edward Yang
and Hsiao Yeh for some reasons crafted a number of characters here who
are mostly lacking in morals. Li Zhong, eyeing a promotion which he
thinks is a given with the death of his boss, goes to the extent of
framing a fellow co-worker so that he can eliminate the competition for
that move upwards, which makes him quite the bastard who gets his
karmic just desserts through the infidelity of his wife, which
ultimately humiliates the man who has to wear a green hat, and is
without a defining career which he so highly prizes it as sort of a
beacon in social stature.
One can imagine just who the real terrorizers are in the film - it's
easy to point the fingers at criminals as depicted in the beginning of
the film, or whoever is holding that gun to exact some form of revenge
against pride, but clearly in this instance, it's really the female of
the species who continue to torment emotionally especially when the
silent treatment gets exacted, which I feel is possibly the cruelest
form of torture to a loved one. The ending is much talked about, and in
my opinion seemed to stem either as material from the fictional book
that Yue Fen finally churned out, or an alternative reality which
points to a consistently bleak outcome of that modern day grind in
life.
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Taipei Blues, 19 April 2008
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Author:
crossbow0106 from United States
This film is shot entirely in Taipei, Taiwan, which in every film I've seen where it is a "co-star" is an interesting city. This film shows Taipei as gritty, dirty, ugly, poor and indifferent. The film was released in 1986 and it follows the police and ordinary citizens in situations which mirror everyday life, including shootouts and chaos. The first scene is a police siren and soon you see a dead man lying on the street. Scenes here are interwoven amongst the characters, who at first seem like they don't inhabit the same world. This makes the film kind of fascinating, that you're a fly on the wall in these people's lives. The use of stark imagery, shadows and light is very effective. The film, despite its title, is not about terrorism or the violence of a particular person. There are lies told in this film which cause some of the problems faced by the main characters. If you do not like moody, introspective films, I don't recommend this. However, director Edward Yang (whom we lost in 2007) has a very impressive body of work (you have to see "Yi Yi") and this is an impressive film.
0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
The Terrorizers, 10 January 2012
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Author:
Martin Teller from Portland OR
After ho-hum reactions to YI YI and BRIGHTER SUMMER DAY, this is the first Yang movie that I liked. The interwoven plot threads slowly reveal themselves in pieces, culminating in a finale that pulls everything together and yet opens up new mysteries. There is some fine cinematography, and the themes of alienation and disconnectedness give you something to chew on. However, I really can only appreciate this on an intellectual level. For me to really love a movie, I have to have some kind of emotional reaction to it. It has to be touching, or amusing, or exciting, or frightening. Like a lot of Antonioni (whose name repeatedly pops up in the reviews of this film), it only left me cold. Only one scene (when the writer weeps in her confused husband's embrace) had any kind of emotional resonance with me. I don't mind a film that makes you think, but there has to be something else to hook me in and encourage me to give it thought. For those who love cinema on a more intellectual level, however, I imagine this would be more rewarding.
7 out of 40 people found the following review useful:
Don't bother., 20 May 2005
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Author:
aodugo from Washington, DC
I tried. I really, really tried to think of something that would merit
rating this higher than a two. It's not that I don't "get it" -- I'm a
big fan of Asian cinema. The truth is, the movie is infantile in
construction, long-winded, and painfully disjointed.
I suppose that if you are of Alfred Hitchcock's school of thought
"Don't tell them, show them," then you could try to appreciate this
movie, but you would still be hard pressed.
First of all, The Terrorizers tries stream-of-consciousness in the
style of Jean-Luc Godard and fails in this. Edward Yang seems to
understand the basics of the technique, but he's very unskilled at it.
(Perhaps he gets better with age; I don't know as I haven't yet
attempted other Yang films.) The point is, he uses a dearth of "show,
don't tell" that really only serves to interrupt the procession of the
story. Sure, he gets in some visually arresting images, but they don't
draw the story together, and they don't help to make it any better.
Additionally, the major concept behind stream-of-consciousness and
"show, don't tell" is that with the right images, the right drama,
repetition, and tight correlation, the viewer will be able to make his
or her own inferences; not to say that these will be the correct
inferences, but those can be amended as the story progresses, and every
director should strive for some of this type of audience interaction.
In this, Edward Yang sorely disappoints. The viewer is constantly on
the periphery. There is no reason to be drawn in, no reason to consider
the characters or their motives, no reason to get emotionally involved,
and really, no reason to stay alert.
Finally, Yang gets lost in the story that he wants to tell, not the
story that the movie itself is telling. His art moves in one direction,
but like a large dog he can't control, he's constantly yanking the
lead, trying to get it back onto the course he wants, not the one that
it is naturally following. The most egregious example of this is the
ending. The ending really should have occurred at the moment of the
husband's revelation. The ending of the book that the movie is focusing
on, (and by extension, a possible ending for the movie) has already
been told to us. If Yang had chosen to end at that point, he would have
had a much more powerful piece, leaving the watcher in suspense -- does
the story play out as the book says, or does Yang's "real world" play
out differently? Asking the viewer to think about this is the sort of
viewer interaction that Yang painfully needs. Instead, he continues to
tell the story he wants to tell, straining the natural conclusion for
the sake of what? For the sheer sake of lingering on a main character
-- we didn't' need to know more about her superficially, and Yang
wouldn't feel the need to tell us if he hadn't made her into a veneer
instead of bothering to make her a more engaging and deep character to
begin with.
Why else does Yang prolong and torture his movie? To get in some more
of those "visually arresting images." The movie truly suffers for it.
It wants to end, it has a conclusion that feels natural and leaves the
viewer unsettled, but instead, Yang pushes on. Instead, Yang constructs
a complex ending that leads the viewer on, causing him or her to
constantly ask "so what?" The first ending, the one that Yang ignored,
that was good. The second ending, well, my thought was"so what, who
cares?", because it's not as if it is introducing something that hasn't
been put forth in the storyline already... but the last ending? That
really was a waste of time. Not only did the "real" ending leave me
disengaged, but I also felt it was an affront to what the story could
have been. Yang sacrificed a potentially good story for the
bubblegum-melancholy-noir-tinged conclusion that he had insisted upon
all along.
My last problem with the movie has nothing to do with the movie itself,
but rather its post-production. The subbing (if you see it subbed) is
horrible. Long sentences stay up for a second or two, while short ones
stay up far too long. Also, as Yang quickly changes images, the
subtitles are removed from the screen. This is one of those rare
instances that subtitles should be able to stay on the screen even as
the image has changed, because there's not much dialog going on anyway.
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