PUNTUACIÓN EN IMDb
7,7/10
5,9 mil
TU PUNTUACIÓN
Un misterio metafísico sobre las vidas de tres parejas en Taipei que se cruzan continuamente durante un lapso de varias semanas.Un misterio metafísico sobre las vidas de tres parejas en Taipei que se cruzan continuamente durante un lapso de varias semanas.Un misterio metafísico sobre las vidas de tres parejas en Taipei que se cruzan continuamente durante un lapso de varias semanas.
- Premios
- 4 premios y 2 nominaciones en total
Li-Chun Lee
- Li Lizhong
- (as Lichun Lee)
Yu An-Shun
- Da Shun
- (as An-Shun Yu)
Reseñas destacadas
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.
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.
When the protagonist's outburst was seen as natural, the cruelty of director Edward Yang was clear at a glance.
It is a classic practice to use accidental events to stimulate daily conflicts, and the effect of this film is very effective. The convergent but the wonderful performance from actors matches the realist style of the story. For most of the time the film is in a state of extreme restraint, so the brief empathize in the ending was magnified. As a result, some of the slightly tardy parts of the film can actually be forgiven.
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.
There's an interesting visual grammar at work in The Terrorizers, consisting of its approach to framing, movement, and pacing. The film is one of the better demonstrations of how images can serve as the basis of a conceptually rich experience. People and objects, because of how they're framed, because of the moment at which we encounter them and because of the light in which they're cast, evoke an atmosphere. In The Terrorizers, even a normally prosaic, and ignored, thing like, say, a staircase or foyer, is imbued with aching suggestiveness.
¿Sabías que...?
- CuriosidadesAt around 1 hour and 4 minutes in, during the night club scene a tv monitor shows a clip from the movie 9 1/2 Weeks
- Citas
Zhou Yufang: It happened on the first day of spring. If you truly feel for the seasons, you'll discover that changes are merely endless rebirths of the past. This spring, it is not different.
- ConexionesFeatured in Guang yin de gu shi: Tai wan xin dian ying (2014)
- Banda sonoraPlease Pretend You Would Not Let Me Go
Performed by Tsai Ching
Played in the final scene and end credits
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- How long is The Terrorizers?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Recaudación en todo el mundo
- 14.633 US$
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By what name was Terrorizers (1986) officially released in Canada in French?
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