Guling jie shaonian sha ren shijian, 1991
[A Brighter Summer Day]
On
an unassuming summer afternoon in 1959, the imploring voice of
a principled, concerned father (Guozhu Zhang) is heard through the
near empty halls of a junior high school as he attempts to persuade
the school administrator into reviewing the grading of his son's
examination paper for Chinese literature (a subject that he claims
his son excels in), drawing on his civil service privileges and
former ties to the mainland (and particularly, a Shanghai intellectual
named Professor Xia) as the indifferent young man Xiao Si'r (Chen
Chang) waits outside for the outcome of his father's futile entreaties.
Having emigrated his family from the mainland to pursue a career
promotion in the immediate years leading to the secession of Taiwan
from China in 1949, his father's social and political influence
- along with the family's modest possessions - has been slowly
eroding under the increasingly nebulous policies of the nascent
nationalist government. As the fledgling nation struggled to redefine
an identity that is separate from the communists of mainland China,
the toll of the cultural upheaval has also manifested in the rampancy
of gang association by Taiwanese youth like Xiao Si'r who see the
petty territoriality of the local street gangs as a surrogate for
the sense of empowerment and communal identity that was denied
them when they were permanently (and reluctantly) uprooted from
their homeland. However, Xiao Si'r soon finds his circumstances
increasingly beleaguered when he befriends (and soon falls for)
a beautiful and seemingly vulnerable young woman (and prospective
actress) named Ming (Lisa Yang), the abandoned girlfriend of a
notorious gang leader named Honey who is rumored to have gone into
hiding after killing a romantic rival for Ming's affection. Already
leading a tenuous day-to-day existence as a probationary student
and burdened with the knowledge of his family's turning fortunes
as a result of the government's increasingly pervasive White Terror
campaign, Xiao Si'r further takes on a seemingly insurmountable
responsibility when he resolves to rescue Ming from her family's
desperate poverty.
Loosely based on a 1961 incident from the filmmaker's childhood (a
highly publicized case that had also led to the prosecution of the
first juvenile trial in Taiwan), A Brighter Summer Day
is a sublimely understated, insightful, and richly textured chronicle
of the social uncertainty and cultural fracture of transplanted
Chinese as they attempt to rebuild their lives in a newly created
nation after being relegated to an unforeseeable life of perpetual
exile. Recalling Hou Hsiao Hsien's cinema of alienated history, most
notably in the magnum opus A City of
Sadness, Edward Yang similarly implements predominantly medium
shots, deliberate pacing (that enables detailed observation), and
episodes of darkness (that also serve to illustrate the country's
constant struggle with intermittent blackouts and unreliable utilities
during the transitional period towards self-reliance) that betray
the characters' sense of estrangement and disorientation behind
the veneer of control and internalized order. Yang further incorporates
episodes of surrogacy and substitution that convey a sense of
pervasive displacement: the young gang member, Cat's requested English
transcription of the Elvis Presley's song Are You Lonesome Tonight?
(from which the titular lyrics were culled) that reflects the younger
generation's assimilation of borrowed culture in the absence of their
own sense of lost ancestral history; the family's occupancy of a
reclaimed Japanese house, Juan's (Wang Juan) payment of Lao Er's
(Zhang Han) debt to redeem their mother's watch that is subsequently
mirrored in his own attempt to reclaim the same watch that Xiao S'ir
later pawns; Ming's pragmatic opportunism that has led to a succession
of often disreputable liaisons. In the end, it is this resigned sentiment
that is reflected in Ming's embittered and ultimately damning words
"I'm like this world. It will never change." - a desperate search to
find some semblance of an elusive, impermanent inner peace within the
hollowed and broken psyches of a dislocated people.
© Acquarello 2004. All rights reserved.
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