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Bu san

  • 2003
  • 1 Std. 22 Min.
IMDb-BEWERTUNG
7,1/10
6839
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Bu san (2003)
Official Trailer ansehen
trailer wiedergeben1:53
1 Video
40 Fotos
DramaKomödie

In einer dunklen, regnerischen Nacht wird in einem historischen und altehrwürdigen chinesischen Kino der letzte Film gezeigt. Mitarbeiter und Besucher nehmen Abschied: "Goodbye, Dragon Inn".In einer dunklen, regnerischen Nacht wird in einem historischen und altehrwürdigen chinesischen Kino der letzte Film gezeigt. Mitarbeiter und Besucher nehmen Abschied: "Goodbye, Dragon Inn".In einer dunklen, regnerischen Nacht wird in einem historischen und altehrwürdigen chinesischen Kino der letzte Film gezeigt. Mitarbeiter und Besucher nehmen Abschied: "Goodbye, Dragon Inn".

  • Regie
    • Tsai Ming-liang
  • Drehbuch
    • Sung Hsi
    • Tsai Ming-liang
  • Hauptbesetzung
    • Kang-sheng Lee
    • Shiang-chyi Chen
    • Kiyonobu Mitamura
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
  • IMDb-BEWERTUNG
    7,1/10
    6839
    IHRE BEWERTUNG
    • Regie
      • Tsai Ming-liang
    • Drehbuch
      • Sung Hsi
      • Tsai Ming-liang
    • Hauptbesetzung
      • Kang-sheng Lee
      • Shiang-chyi Chen
      • Kiyonobu Mitamura
    • 41Benutzerrezensionen
    • 89Kritische Rezensionen
    • 83Metascore
  • Siehe Produktionsinformationen bei IMDbPro
    • Auszeichnungen
      • 13 Gewinne & 11 Nominierungen insgesamt

    Videos1

    Official Trailer
    Trailer 1:53
    Official Trailer

    Fotos40

    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
    Poster ansehen
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    + 34
    Poster ansehen

    Topbesetzung9

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    Kang-sheng Lee
    Kang-sheng Lee
    • Hsiao-Kang
    Shiang-chyi Chen
    Shiang-chyi Chen
    • Ticket Woman
    Kiyonobu Mitamura
    • Japanese tourist
    Chun Shih
    Chun Shih
    • Self
    Miao Tien
    Miao Tien
    • Self
    • (as Tien Miao)
    Chen Chao-jung
    Chen Chao-jung
      Yi Cheng Lee
      Yi Cheng Lee
      Kuei-Mei Yang
      Kuei-Mei Yang
      • Peanut Eating Woman
      Quail Youth-Leigh
        • Regie
          • Tsai Ming-liang
        • Drehbuch
          • Sung Hsi
          • Tsai Ming-liang
        • Komplette Besetzung und alle Crew-Mitglieder
        • Produktion, Einspielergebnisse & mehr bei IMDbPro

        Benutzerrezensionen41

        7,16.8K
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        Saanwithhisstupidthoughts

        AT TIMES FUNNY AT TIMES TOUCHING YET AT SOME TIMES CONFUSING

        Goodbye dragon inn is a very calm and an almost silent art movie that shows us the events that takes place during an old theatres last screening before it stops screening cinema forever and also pans the camera to show us the characters who work there and are also there to watch a movie for one last time.

        It has almost no dialogues...like there is a total of 3 or maybe 4 dialogue exchange that takes place in the whole movie

        It has very long shots that are mostly still and has absolutely no camera movements in between and also nothing happens in almost all of these long shot scenes....so it might be painful and frustrating for those people who have no patience...hell this movie will test your patience to an extreme level for sure

        I cant say I understood everything but I am writing here what I could process from watching it and what I liked about it.

        The movie was very slow paced for me...this is the slowest movie I have seen till date...Adam drivers PATERSON was the one that I remember watching that was extremely slow paced before this one but this tops all the splow paced movies I have ever watched easily so I was surprised that even while staring at a long shot of hallway where absolutely nothing happens I wasn't bored and by the end of the movie it had already grown on me....

        The actors in this movie are almost without expressions There is this one gay guy though who is desperately looking for a one night stand....and his expressions his disappointment his irritation everything was amusing to me

        The there is this young limping ticket counter girl who has feelings for the projectionist guy...this is a one side romance and it's shown to us in a very simple way and without any drama to it...I liked that too

        Then about the dialogues there is one that will definitely change the way you think about the characters existence...yup

        And this is why I liked the fact that it felt almost real to me like it had that realistic feeling to it BUT along with a possible supernatural element lingering along with it.

        And I feel that those guys who have a favourite theatre of theirs...where they used to watch tons of movies on a frequent basis and had to witness that theatres demoliton and are emotional and nostalgicabout it....this movie may be very effective for them.

        So I am concluding this essay lol by saying that I will only recommend this flick to art house movie lovers or those peeps who are extremely patient

        I also wanna add a small piece of something that I felt was true from the director of this movie

        'The movies that we know today are so dominated by storytelling. My question is: is film really only about storytelling? Couldn't film have other kinds of functions? This question brings me back to my own experience of film watching. It's very rare that I remember the story of any film. I usually only remember a certain moment that touched me. But I direct my attention to daily life and living. In our own lives there's no story, each day is filled with repetition. Movies today feel like in their two hours they have to tell a story so they're filled with indexes and indicators to point to the completion of a story. The audience has gotten used to it. I think film can be more than just that. I believe that the stories of my films can all be told in two sentences. Like in The Skywalk Is Gone: Lee Kang-sheng and Chen Shiang-chyi walk past each other but don't recognize each other. That's it. I'm trying to remove the dramatic elements from the story to disguise it. Film and reality are different, but by removing that kind of artificial dramatic element, I believe that I'm bringing them closer.'
        chaos-rampant

        Mystery theater

        I particularly value what is often advertised as 'meditational' films. Visual mantras that demand stillness of mind and concentrated observation. But, although they have proliferated over the last 15 years, so few get the experience right, which seems to be the result of a younger generation of filmmakers who have merely studied the command Tarkovsky or Antonioni had over their camera but not the truthful seeing.

        Tarkovsky and Antonioni swam in polar extremes of the same flow; inside and outside. The experience is the same. We flow with them to the place where we can get in-sight of what it means to flow in our world. In Solyaris, we flow inside the mind where our images are born. In The Passenger we flow outside self and identity into a liberating awareness of the world as is.

        This could've been something special in this regard because there's a film-within to flow into from the one we are watching. But it never happens.

        The two levels are not conjoined into a larger narrative, but rather contrasted. Inside the film the audience is watching (King Hu's Dragon Inn from the golden years of wuxia), the characters are free, passionate, filled with an ardor of life. Rigid hierarchies of clan or dynasty imply a comforting plan in this fictional life. Outside the film, life is a murk, a haunting of anonymous souls. The crippled girl is always struggling to get somewhere, up a flight of stairs or down the corridor. The Japanese guy is always constricted by indifferent strangers. Both their efforts inside the theater are with the sole end of watching the movie, the place where seems to be some purpose and things make some sense.

        So, inside the preordained world of fiction the characters are strangely free, while the reality of ostensibly myriad possibilities is shown to be thoroughly aimless.

        Being an art piece (what dreary connotations, no?), we get all these as elongated stanzas. We literally watch the crippled woman walk all the way up. It works barely enough to resonate with the ideas mentioned above, but it's very little for a feature film, very hollow. The few ideas here rattle in so much emptiness. Whereas in a Kiarostami film this elongated observation teems with life, here it is stylized to the point of a trinket that is perhaps pleasing to the eye but lifeless.

        If you simply want to see a love letter to movies and movie- watching, seek out the Chacun sons Cinema compilation. Almost all the films are better than this, and they're all shorts. I have particularly fond memories of Andrei Konchalovsky's entry, Dans le Noir, which also takes place inside a cinema.
        liehtzu

        absence

        Tsai Ming-liang's "Goodbye Dragon Inn" is a spectacularly dull movie, a limp ode to the bygone days of cinema-going. A film smitten with its own stasis, "Goodbye" culminates in a shot held for an obscene amount of time of an empty movie theater. Tsai's known for holding his shots way past the point most directors yell cut, and the result can be strikingly effective in the right context (the brilliant final shot of "Vive L'Amour") but "Goodbye" is almost an art film parody in its studied minimalism. The money shot in particular is a groan-inducer that makes you long for a fast-forward button.

        "Goodbye Dragon Inn" sounds like it ought to appeal: a homage to the glory days of cinema by a great director, but Tsai seems to be resting on the assumption that anything he cranks out these days is destined for acclaim (which is true). However, ever since "The Hole" Tsai's inspiration appears to be running out; what in the earlier films seems innovative comes off as mannered in the later ones. "What Time is it There?" is a good flick but hardly feels like anything new from the filmmaker, "The Skywalk is Gone" is a short-film punchline for "What Time?," and "Goodbye" is just grinding. Tsai's probably incapable of making a thoroughly awful movie and there are spots of greatness in "Goodbye Dragon Inn," but hardly enough to justify a feature-length film. You can almost feel the director yawning behind the camera as he's filming, telling his actress to just continue sitting for an interminable amount of time so he can pad it just a little more (though the movie is only 80 minutes long it feels much, much longer). The director's always threatened to deadend his limited stylistic resources and "Goodbye Dragon Inn" is the wall he's always threatened to hit. I like Tsai and think he has some worthwhile things to say, but he's said the same things over and over again and the point's been made. People these days have trouble connecting, the values of the old days have become buried under the industrial rubble of progress, yes yes. Tsai fixates on the same themes in the same way he fixates on an empty theater or a woman hobbling slowly across the screen. Since there isn't too terribly much variety thematically or stylistically in the his films, familiarity with his past work leads to a feeling of having repeatedly tread the same path. It takes a true master to be able to be as stubbornly dwell on the same ideas in the same manner over the course of a career and pull it off, and Tsai is hardly a Bresson or Ozu. Flashes of brilliance and invention are certainly to be found in Tsai's movies, but "Goodbye" just uses minimalism to mask its lack of substance. Slow movies don't have to be tedious and unrewarding, as a few Tsai Ming-liang films have demonstrated, but often the tendency among art film devotees is to equivocate slow and good. "Goodbye Dragon Inn" isn't very good. The ideas are slight, the homage curiously lacks feeling, and the whole thing just drags along way past the point of interest like Tsai's lead actress down the corridor.
        10ehol

        The curtain falls

        If you've read the other reviews, you know what you're in for. Don't worry about spoilers (none here, but don't worry about others'), because not much happens in the movie. Tsai paints his movies at the speed of Michelangelo painting a ceiling--no, he unreels them at the speed of the epic that's played this old movie house a thousand times. As in other Tsai movies, the colors are rich, and even the starkest images are carefully composed, allowing the film to convey the full depth of feelings.

        That's what this movie does. It doesn't tell a story, really, but conveys what it's like to walk along empty city streets on a rainy night, alone. And what it's like to be in a dying old movie palace. The community that has outgrown the old Fu Ho cinema seems to tell its patrons, its employees, and even the building itself that all of them really ought to be somewhere else. But there they are, where they need to be, for the last show.

        The movie's point of view is variously that of the young limping woman, the Japanese kid, and the old actors, but ultimately, Tsai tells the story from the theater's point of view, as if he interviewed it Tsai-style, pointing the camera at it and letting the theater speak at its edificial pace. You feel all that it's seen and sees, every day. It's as if the theater knows it's done for, resigned to its fate, not yet ready to die, too tired to fight.

        It doesn't matter that the theater is in Taipei. Anyone who had a special place for movies, especially if it's gone, will be able to see that theater in the Fu Ho. I thought of my last visits to Seattle's Coliseum, King and United Artists theaters, and how they clung to life in their final days. All of them could seat hundreds of patrons, maybe a thousand even, and I never once saw them close to filled. The King is now a megachurch, the Coliseum is a Banana Republic, and the UA is dust, with the marquee sign marking its grave. The movies that played there live on in DVDs and shoebox megaplexes, but their days of playing in grand auditoria to great audiences are largely gone. How can "Lawrence of Arabia" be "Lawrence" in a shoebox, or on any CRT or LCD screen?

        Norma Desmond told us about the pictures getting smaller. Tsai warns us that the last days of the big screen are here, and that the credits are rolling. Many loved the old moviehouses in their grand glory days, but in "Goodbye Dragon Inn," Tsai shows the beauty of the big theaters as their curtains slowly fall.
        artist_signal

        A Work of Mood and Color

        Tsai Ming Liang's recent piece "Goodbye, Dragon Inn" (Bu San) is a film chock full of beautiful color and rich, textured moods. It features the characteristic pacing of Taiwanese film, and it is composed of shot upon remarkable shot of a crumbling movie theatre in its final days, playing the last runs of "Dragon Gate Inn", a martial art classic Dir. by King Hu. Some of the stark imagery lingers, and it is just the pure action of the actors (there is no dialogue in the film for the first 45 minutes) that makes the film a profound stylistic achievement. There are some appearances by the original actors of The Dragon Gate Inn film (Tien Miao, for one); and Tsai Ming Liang's favorite actor Lee-Kang Sheng shows up at the end as the film projectionist. There's also a fine performance by Chen Shiang-chyi, who plays the limping "heroine" of the film, if such a thing exists in this movie. A great film overall, and a cinematic work that tries to say a very heartfelt and melancholic "goodbye" to not only "Dragon Gate Inn", but also to the old cultural and historical values that are perhaps beginning to fade in Taiwan.

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        Handlung

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        • Wissenswertes
          The theater used for the film was actually on the brink of being closed, and shortly before the film was released it was indeed closed, in an strange example of life imitating art.
        • Zitate

          Shih Chun: Teacher Miao. Shih-Chun.

          [pause]

          Shih Chun: Teacher, you came to see the movie?

          Tien Miao: I haven't seen a movie in a long time.

          Shih Chun: No one goes to the movies anymore, and no one remembers us anymore.

        • Verbindungen
          Features Die Herberge zum Drachentor (1967)
        • Soundtracks
          Chong Feng
          by Ge Lan

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        FAQ16

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        Details

        Ändern
        • Erscheinungsdatum
          • 12. Dezember 2003 (Taiwan)
        • Herkunftsland
          • Taiwan
        • Sprachen
          • Mandarin
          • Min Nan
          • Japanisch
        • Auch bekannt als
          • Goodbye, Dragon Inn
        • Drehorte
          • Taipeh, Taiwan
        • Produktionsfirma
          • Homegreen Films
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        Box Office

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        • Bruttoertrag in den USA und Kanada
          • 35.120 $
        • Eröffnungswochenende in den USA und in Kanada
          • 5.322 $
          • 19. Sept. 2004
        • Weltweiter Bruttoertrag
          • 1.029.643 $
        Weitere Informationen zur Box Office finden Sie auf IMDbPro.

        Technische Daten

        Ändern
        • Laufzeit
          • 1 Std. 22 Min.(82 min)
        • Farbe
          • Color
        • Sound-Mix
          • Dolby Digital
        • Seitenverhältnis
          • 1.85 : 1

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