| Yi
Yi (Taiwan/Japan; 173 min.) directed by: Edward Yang starring:Wu Nien Jen; Elaine Jin; Issey Ogata; Kelly Lee; Jonathan Chang |
![]() |
|
| Diane says: YI YI by Edward Yang is
a Taiwanese AMERICAN
BEAUTY. Members of a middle-class family go through changes, in isolation
from each other (startlingly oblivious to each other's crises, just like
in this year's novel The Bee Season). They seek meaning and solace
in reviving old romances, joining a cult, starting a love affair, or through
superstition. Family loyalty and the status quo are the values held up in
the end. The Wes Bentley character says something like, "Each cloud... each
tree is beautiful, so why not each one of us?" Nien-Jen Wu as the father is just perfect, and comic relief is provided by the philosophically-inclined eight-year-old. I didn't love it as much as the critics, only because I found it too long at three hours, and the many shots through reflections in plate glass windows bothered me." 4 cats |
||
| Laura says: "Writer/director Edward
Yang's (A BRIGHTER
SUMMER DAY) YI YI is one of the year 2000's most satisfying films on
many levels. The story, while playing like a soap opera on the surface,
is chock full of wry human observations while showing great affection for
its characters. Technically, the film is striking in every aspect."
5 cats For Laura's complete review: "http://www.reelingreviews.com/yiyi.htm" |
||
| Michael says: "Just saw the Taiwanese film YI YI last night, a three hour examination of a modern-day family. Director Edward Yang really takes his time developing the storylines of the four members of NJ's family, father, mother, teen-aged daughter and 8-year-old son. Yang takes us through the entire life cycle, from birth, through life, with all the love and loss it entails, to death. Performances a superb all around. The adorable 8-year-old Yang Yang is priceless. Nien-Jen Wu as patriarch, N.J. gives a quietly emotional performance, and Kelly Lee's conflicted teenager, Ting-Ting handles the emotional swings of adolesence wonderfully. All the many performances are terrific actually." - 5 cats | ||
|
Robin says: "The vast ensemble cast revolves
around Wu Nienjen as NJ. The screenwriter turned actor/director plays
the strong, silent type here, but a man with a great deal of emotion and
feeling under his inscrutable surface. The terrific cast around him is
too numerous to catalogue, but they all give solid performances right
down to little Yang-Yang, whose final speech over grandma's casket tells
it all. From the mouths of babes?" 5 cats |
||