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EdwardYang Tagged Articles at Cinematical

Taiwanese Filmmaker Edward Yang Dead at 59

Filed under: Drama », Foreign Language », Independent », Cannes », Obits », Cinematical Indie »

These things always seem to come in sets, don't they? Just last week, ABC film critic Joel Siegel passed away from colon cancer. Director Edward Yang, born in Shanghai and raised in Taiwan, and little known to American audiences in spite of an impressive body of work, has also died recently from complications of colon cancer.

Like Variety's Anne Thompson, I'm not as familiar with Yang's work as I'd like to be; there are times when it seems that no matter how many fests I attend, how many foreign films and docs and indie dramas I see, I can never catch up and see them all, and it takes a death to make me realize that I've not seen or appreciated enough of this person's life work. I see a lot of Asian cinema, and still I'm almost completely unfamiliar with Yang's films -- something I intend to correct at the first opportunity.

Senses of Cinema has a solid write-up by Saul Austerlitz on the director and his body of work in their Great Directors section. Two of Yang's better known works are Yi Yi (his last completed feature -- Yang was diagnosed with colon cancer shortly after winning the award Best Director at Cannes in 2000 for the film), and A Brighter Summer Day.

Austerlitz writes about Yang, "His films express the confusion, anxiety, and sheer beauty of societal transformation. Yang also equates the macrocosmic and microcosmic, making the lives of his characters stand in for the greater, less visible processes of social change. Along with Hou Hsiao-hsien and Tsai Ming-liang, Yang is one of the most visible faces of the Taiwanese New Wave, possibly the most brilliant filmmaking movement in the world today."

Here's a roundup of some other write-ups on Yang and his work; as a whole, they give a nice perspective on the man and his films:

Mahola Dargis, New York Times: "Mr. Yang directed seven features that in their visual style and preoccupations - including the impact of modernization on the Taiwanese middle class - argue for his status as an auteur."

Green Cine Daily: "His movies focused on Taiwan, but they were not primarily about Taiwan. They were about humankind."

The Guardian -- 2001 interview by Duncan Campbell: "Like the small boy with the camera in A One and a Two, Yang seems now to be in the perfect position to use film to show people the parts of their lives that they normally miss."

Godfrey Cheshire, The Village Voice: " ... one of modern cinema's most fascinating careers passed largely unseen by American cinephiles."

Ray Pride for Movie City Indie: "I don't like to use the word "humanist," but that is one of the lesser things you could say of Edward Yang's Yi-Yi ..."

RIP: Reel Important People -- July 2, 2007

Filed under: Obits »

  • Claude Brosset (1943-2007) - French actor who appears opposite Jean Paul Belmondo in L'Alpagueur, Les Corps de mon Ennemi, Flic ou Voyou and Le Marginal. He also appears in George Roy Hill's A Little Romance, Costa-Gavras' Un Homme de Trop and Tavernier's Capitaine Conan and L.627. He died June 25 in Pontoise, Val d'Oise, France. (IMDb.com)
  • Leo Burmester (1944-2007) - Actor who who played 'Catfish' in The Abyss (pictured). He also appears in Lone Star, The Legend of Zorro, The Last Temptation of Christ, A Perfect World and The Devil's Advocate. He died of leukemia June 28. (Playbill)
  • Brian Finch (1936-2007) - British screenwriter, mostly for television (Coronation Street), who wrote 2005's Heidi, which featured Max Von Sydow. He died June 27. (The Independent)
  • Anita Guha (?-2007) - Indian actress who portrayed Hindu goddesses in Sampoorna Ramayana, Tulsi Vivah and Krishna-Krishna. She also starred as the title character in the hit film Jai Santoshi Maa. She died of heart failure June 20, in Mumbai. (Variety)
  • William Hutt (1920-2007) - Canadian actor who appears in Norman Jewison's The Statement and John Frankenheimer's The Fixer. He also provided his voice for the sci-fi pic The Shape of Things to Come and multiple documentaries. He died of leukemia June 27, in Stratford, Ontario. (Variety)
 

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