Friday, September 26, 2008

Dragon Eye Congee

Dragon Eye Congee: A Dream of Love , is a NT$5 million romance film set in the 1960s. Produced by the respected veteran of Taiwan film Lee Hsing and directed by award-winning young director Allen Chang, this romance film stars Singapore's Fann Wong, Hong Kong's Shaun Tam and Taiwan's Ivy Yin Hsin.

Cast


* Fann Wong
* Shaun Tam
* Ivy Yin Hsin

Story



Based on a short story of the same name written in the 1950s by the Taiwanese intellectual and democracy activist Bo Yang, Dragon Eye Congee tells the story of a second-generation Taiwanese American, Shaun Tam, who, since childhood, has repeatedly dreamt about the same woman in the same scenes, complete with a haunting melody and the fragrant smell of rice congee with dried longan.

He is totally mystified about the significance of the dream until he comes to Taiwan for the first time on a business trip and stumbles upon an old house and a woman played by Fann Wong, resembling those in his dreams. Eventually, he realizes that the woman was his lover in a previous lifetime in Taiwan.

Crew


Produced by veteran Taiwanese director Lee Hsing of Lee's Production Ltd , he came out of retirement to produce his first film in 20 years , funding NT$2 million. The director of the film is Allen Chang Kuo-Fu, the winner of the Golden Horse Award Best Short Film in 2000.

Trivia


This film was nominated for five categories at the inaugural Asian Festival of First Films 2005, held in Singapore. This film also participated at the Golden Horse Awards Film Festival 2005.

Double Vision (film)

Double Vision is a film directed by Chen Kuo-fu. The plot is about an FBI agent working with a troubled Taiwanese cop to hunt for a serial killer who is embedding a mysterious black fungus in the brains of the victims.

Main cast


*Tony Leung Ka Fai – Huang Huo-tu
* – Kevin Richter
*Rene Liu – Ching-fang
*Hannah Lin – Ghost
*Yang Kuei Mei
*Sihung Lung

Plot


A troubled police detective Huang Huo-tu suffers from a severe mental breakdown as his life is falling apart. He is relegated to a mundane job as a Foreign Affairs Officer as a payback for blowing the whistle on in the force. His young daughter is suffering from the fallout of being held hostage in a police crossfire. His fellow colleagues have turned on him and his wife Ching-fang is filing for divorce.

Suddenly, a series of bizarre deaths in Taipei baffle local investigators. An FBI agent Kevin Richter is called in to solve the murders. He is the topmost serial killer expert in the field, but even he cannot explain the seemingly supernatural circumstances surrounding the crime scenes. For example, in one case a businessman froze to death in his office - in the middle of a heatwave; the mistress of a prominent official calls the fire department and is later found burned to death - with no sign of fire in her apartment. Richter partners with Huang who has less trouble believing that something supernatural is behind them, and on that angle he persuades him to investigate a local cult. They discover increasingly disturbing evidence that there are possible demonic forces at work.

Crimes Are To Be Paid

Crimes Are To Be Paid is a and Hong Kong film .

Chaochow Guy

Chaochow Guy is a and Hong Kong film .

Cape No. 7

Cape No. 7 is a 2008 Taiwanese written and directed by Taiwanese director . The film is mainly in but also contains significant lines in and . Before its commercial release, the film was selected as one of the opening films in the 2008 Taipei Film Festival.

The two leading actors Van Fan and Chie Tanaka only had minor acting experience while most of the other actors were amateurs, picked mainly for their rock band experience as needed by the plot. Although without a strong promotional campaign, this movie attracted unexpected popularity in Taiwan after its official release on August 22, 2008. As of September 18, the movie has grossed over NT$ 100 million. It is also the top grossing Taiwanese film in the island's cinematic history.

Plot


Back in the 1940s during the Taiwan under Japanese rule era, a Japanese teacher dispatched to fell in love with a local girl who was given the Japanese name Kojima Tomoko. However, after the Surrender of Japan he was forced to return to his home country. He penned 7 love letters on his trip home to express his regret for leaving Kojima Tomoko, who originally planned on living in Japan with Atari.

More than 60 years after Atari left Tomoko, Aga is introduced as a struggling young Hengchun-native rock band singer who could not secure a job in Taipei. After returning to his hometown, Aga's step father, the Town Council Representative, arranged a postman position for him, replacing the senile Uncle Mao, on break after a motorcycle accident broke his leg. One day Aga came across an undeliverable mail: the Japanese teacher has been dead and his offspring decided to mail these unsent love letters to Taiwan after discovering them. Aga unlawfully opened this mail to discover that the old Japanese-style address Cape No.7, Hengchun County, Takao Prefecture could no longer be found.

Meantime a local resort hotel inside Kenting National Park is organizing a beach concert featuring Japanese pop singer Kousuke Atari, but Aga's step father made use of his official identity to insist that the accompanying band be formed by locals. Tomoko, a Chinese-speaking Japanese fashion model dispatched to Hengchun, took up the difficult task of managing this band, led by Aga along with 6 other locals of rather particular backgrounds. After a frustrating trial period Aga and Tomoko unexpectedly began a relationship. With some assistance from hotel maid Ming-chu, Tomoko helped Aga find Kojima Tomoko, the rightful recipient of the 7 love letters. Aga then returned to the beach resort and performed a highly successful concert with this local band and Kousuke Atari.

Production notes


This movie was mainly filmed between September and November 2007 in and its neighboring and Township, together located in the Hengchun Peninsula of Pingtung County, with few scenes filmed in of Pingtung County, Kaohsiung International Airport, and Ximending in Taipei. Before filming, Chie Tanaka had been staying in Taiwan for one year to study Chinese so she did not have problem dealing with the Chinese lines in the film. Kousuke Atari appeared as himself and acted as the 1940s Japanese teacher in this film.

The production had problems securing financial interest and forced director Wei NT$ 30 million into debt before release. Wei later said this film's zealous reception should help him manage his debts.

Awards


* 2008 Taipei Film Festival: Taipei Million Grand Award, Best Audience Award, Best Cinematography.

* 2008 Asian Marine Film Festival: Grand Prize

Cafe Lumiere

is a 2003 directed by Taiwanese director Hou Hsiao-Hsien for Shochiku as homage to Yasujiro Ozu, with direct reference to the late master's ''Tokyo Story'' . It premiered at a festival commemorating the centenary of Ozu's birth. Many critics hailed the film reminiscent of Ozu's works as an artistically significant step for Hou, and it was nominated for a Golden Lion at the 2004 Venice Film Festival.

Plot



The story revolves around a young Japanese woman doing research on Taiwanese composer Jiang Wen-Ye, whose work is featured on the soundtrack. The late composer's Japanese wife and daughter also make appearances as themselves.

Bronze Head And Steel Arm

Bronze Head And Steel Arm is a and Hong Kong kung fu film .