
Hou Hsiao Hsien's
A City of Sadness (1989)
Remarkable and beautiful ... One of the supreme masterworks of the contemporary cinema.Jonathan Rosenbaum, Chicago Reader
Winner of the Golden Lion at Venice in 1989, Hou's panoramic tale takes in the four tumultuous years from 1945, when Japan surrendered Taiwan to China at the end of World War II, to 1949, when Chiang Kai Shek established his Nationalist government on the island after fall of the mainland to the Communists. The period is related from the complex perspective of one family: aging widower Lin, his four sons (a gangster, a missing doctor, an accused wartime collaborator, and a leftist photographer), and their wives. The film is dark, richly textured, and visually exquisite, and ignited controversy at home for its treatment of a long-taboo subject: the brutal repression of the Taiwanese independence movement by the Nationalist Chinese. It was only after
A family epic as expansive asThe Godfather Godfrey Cheshire, Film Comment
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