HOU HSIAO-HSIEN PANEL | Higher Learning
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This roundtable discussion examines the influential work of Taiwanese filmmaker Hou Hsiao-hsien and his masterful film Dust in the Wind. In partnership with the Asian Institute at the Munk School of Global Affairs, University of Toronto and the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada's National Conversation on Asia, this Higher Learning event was held on June 9, 2013 at TIFF Bell Lightbox.
Panelists included: David Bordwell, Jacques Ledoux Emeritus Professor of Film Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison; James Udden, Associate Professor of Film Studies at Gettysburg College, Pennsylvania; and Bart Testa, Senior Lecturer at the Cinema Studies Institute, Innis College, University of Toronto, as moderator.
Visit the Higher Learning Digital Resource Hub to learn more about our upcoming events at TIFF Bell Lightbox and to access bibliographies, filmographies and additional resources associated with this event. www.tiff.net/hi...
Very informative, illuminating lecture
Who is the forgotten director that stopped in 1987 who was mentioned? I didn't catch the name.
+childerolandutube He was talking about Zhang Yi 張毅. Zhang Yi's best known films are "Yu Qingsao" (an adaptation of one of Bai Xianyong's earliest short stories) and "Wo Zheiyang Guole Yisheng." You should be able to find some of his films available on DVD on line.
Zhang Yi 's Kuei-mei, a Woman(1985) are also great
There were some serious empirical errors in Udden's comments.
Hou is dull, dull, dull.
U can watch michael bay's film
Yeah, the characters in City of Sadness can transform into big robots and blow up Taipei. Cool.
Andrea Ostrov Letania Haha. City of Sadness is a disaster to me as well. Hou himself didn't like it too. He mentioned it in an interview as well.
Andrea Ostrov Letania LOL, The next time you are generous enough again to inch out some more endurance to stomach some of his films eg. Cafe Lumiere, just treat it like you are accompany the characters in his film like you would accompany a friend.
Not all life moments are about "Come on, let's bottom up!.
Like small road-side wild flowers standing among the grandiose beauty of man-made buildings, the exquisite beauty of their realness in the moment are ready for your eyes the moment your heart is ready.
The fabric of time flowing now.
Feel it,
If you allow it.
If your heart calms down
Like when your friends need your quiet presence
To accompany them.
Don't be a pompous ass.
Hiroshi Koreeda, now he knows something roadside flowers. Hou is a dull and leaden film-making who painstakingly constipates images into dried doo doo.