अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंDa-Nian is a young man from Taipei. He goes to a remote village and works as a substitute teacher. He and Su-Yun, another teacher at the school, fall in love. There are several students in h... सभी पढ़ेंDa-Nian is a young man from Taipei. He goes to a remote village and works as a substitute teacher. He and Su-Yun, another teacher at the school, fall in love. There are several students in his class who are like the naughty "three musketeers", and a sad, silent boy Xiang-Wang, wh... सभी पढ़ेंDa-Nian is a young man from Taipei. He goes to a remote village and works as a substitute teacher. He and Su-Yun, another teacher at the school, fall in love. There are several students in his class who are like the naughty "three musketeers", and a sad, silent boy Xiang-Wang, who's parents are divorced. Besides, in order to support the family, Xian-Wang's father kill... सभी पढ़ें
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फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Ok, the story is not exactly engaging, but more a gentle meander. And the denouement is nicely predictable and very neatly wrapped up.
But for a pleasant 90 minutes, why not?
I don't know what was the purpose Hou liked so much to paint a picture of the earlier Taiwan. Maybe he thought the Taiwanese during the earlier time were more simple-minded, sincere, honest, naive, pure. The livelihood during that era was what the modern-day Taiwanese should have kept, even a martial law was in effect at that time, but it rarely affected and bothered the Taiwanese to have a normal daily life so long as you didn't openly against the KMT government. The martial law was a necessary evil during that time to prevent the possible invasion of the Chinese Communist force from Mainland China, but the people, the families, the kids, the society didn't feel they were controlled or suppressed by the martial law. When looking back, if compared what the livelihood people in Taiwan went on and went through with what the Chinese people in China by the iron-clad and atrocious cleansing process of the Chinese Communist Party, Taiwan, to most of the older generation Taiwanese, although poor and meager, was still a rather paradise-like haven, except to those fewer who didn't want to recognize and appreciate what the KMT government really tried to improve the living standard for all of the Taiwanese people and later became the DPP extremists.
Hou's films for the earlier Taiwanese livelihood and their people, the simple and innocent bygones with deep touch of melancholy reminiscence and retrospection were good, but from today's viewpoint and standard, the screenplays he crafted, the way he directed, those actors he signed on to play those roles he created...all of these are simply too outdated, primitive, raw and awkward. Those paintings might look good on the wall, but if you walk up to them too close, you'd find all the brushes were just too awkward to watch.
Again, we, my wife and I, both agreed at the same moment that the dialog and the acting by those leading actors were simply unbearable, so we've decided unanimously not to watch after 30 minutes' torture.
I was smiling constantly for the first third of the film, because it so warmly and lovingly portrays its characters, particularly the schoolchildren. There is some drama as the film progresses but while it is genuinely touching it is not major and everything is resolved before the movie is over. The final act is yet again light-hearted although now we know that there is a little more than meets the eye. The film has a happy end and I left the theater with a lifted spirit.
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विवरण
- रिलीज़ की तारीख़
- कंट्री ऑफ़ ओरिजिन
- भाषाएं
- इस रूप में भी जाना जाता है
- The Green, Green Grass of Home
- उत्पादन कंपनी
- IMDbPro पर और कंपनी क्रेडिट देखें