Terrorizers

Alternate title(s):
Foreign Title: K’ung-pu fen-tzu
Date: January 01, 1986 to December 31, 1986
Dates Note: 1986
Country of Origin:
Place of Origin: Taiwan
Languages: Mandarin
Color: Color
Silent: No
Based On:
Additional Info:


Curator Notes

Film Series/Exhibition Title: 
Edward Yang’s Taipei Stories
Description: 

Ostensibly inspired by a documentary on a German terrorist group, Edward Yang’s third feature instead discovers, hidden within the stillness of human emotion, a terror far more brutal than any moment of physical violence. Bookended by images of guns and corpses, the film’s true focus is on the violence enacted in everyday relationships, whether between lovers, coworkers, or strangers. The narrative weaves intricately between three scattered groups of characters: a doctor and his novelist wife, a mopey woman hoodlum, and a love-struck photographer, all threaded together by one prank phone call and a sense of deceit and lingering entropy. For Yang, the film “is built rather like a puzzle; the spectator can rearrange it in his head when he gets home.” It is the inescapable feeling, not the telling, of the story that matters. Indeed, the gunshots at the beginning and end seem interchangeable, almost anticlimactic, rendered quaintly obsolete by the film’s painstakingly traumatic layering of human relations and their emotional violence. 

Authors/Roles: 
Jason Sanders


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