A metaphysical mystery about the lives of three couples in Taipei that continually intersect over a span of several weeks.A metaphysical mystery about the lives of three couples in Taipei that continually intersect over a span of several weeks.A metaphysical mystery about the lives of three couples in Taipei that continually intersect over a span of several weeks.
- Awards
- 4 wins & 2 nominations total
Li-Chun Lee
- Li Lizhong
- (as Lichun Lee)
Yu An-Shun
- Da Shun
- (as An-Shun Yu)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Edward Yang is not the romantic type. In fact, The Terrorizers shows us romance as a crime. To use your partner for your own gain and thus robbing them of themselves. A man consumed by his identity as a cog in the capitalist machine has no chance of finding himself after he's used, been used and consequently drenched without him even knowing it. He no longer exists.
This movie is so philosophically sound, and its beauty lies in its loyalty to its message. The theme of terrorizing romance overlaps in every single frame of the movie. A wife leaving her oblivious, ignorant husband is the same as a hooker robbing her customer.
I think what we learn from this movie is that for a relationship not to be a crime, a collective direction is needed. The young girl knows this. Don't steal things from each other, steal together, from others.
This movie is so philosophically sound, and its beauty lies in its loyalty to its message. The theme of terrorizing romance overlaps in every single frame of the movie. A wife leaving her oblivious, ignorant husband is the same as a hooker robbing her customer.
I think what we learn from this movie is that for a relationship not to be a crime, a collective direction is needed. The young girl knows this. Don't steal things from each other, steal together, from others.
When the protagonist's outburst was seen as natural, the cruelty of director Edward Yang was clear at a glance.
It is a classic practice to use accidental events to stimulate daily conflicts, and the effect of this film is very effective. The convergent but the wonderful performance from actors matches the realist style of the story. For most of the time the film is in a state of extreme restraint, so the brief empathize in the ending was magnified. As a result, some of the slightly tardy parts of the film can actually be forgiven.
There's an interesting visual grammar at work in The Terrorizers, consisting of its approach to framing, movement, and pacing. The film is one of the better demonstrations of how images can serve as the basis of a conceptually rich experience. People and objects, because of how they're framed, because of the moment at which we encounter them and because of the light in which they're cast, evoke an atmosphere. In The Terrorizers, even a normally prosaic, and ignored, thing like, say, a staircase or foyer, is imbued with aching suggestiveness.
This film is a masterpiece, a telling of the loneliness of the modern world with perfect resonance. It is swift, vital, and brilliant. Along with Taipei Story, Yang has shown in The Terrorizers the pressures of urban life, love, and the ceaselessness of time more artfully than can be expressed in words. Youth and its joys and pains in a modern world have perhaps never been exhibited more skillfully than Yang has done in these two films. I have only found the Taiwanese new wave directors a month ago, but I will highly recommend Edward Yang to anyone who has ever truly felt loneliness or love. Yang is a beautiful director, and this is a beautiful film.
The Terrorizers is not on par with Yang's two most famous films - but it's pretty damn close. Melancholic throughout, all of the loosely connected characters are stricken by Antonioni-like ennui in a modernized, concrete Taipei, reflecting on lives that are heading in unwelcome directions. The ending(s) feel abrupt given the careful build-up, but the style and beauty of Yang's later gems are also displayed here.
Did you know
- TriviaAt around 1 hour and 4 minutes in, during the night club scene a tv monitor shows a clip from the movie 9 1/2 Weeks
- Quotes
Zhou Yufang: It happened on the first day of spring. If you truly feel for the seasons, you'll discover that changes are merely endless rebirths of the past. This spring, it is not different.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Guang yin de gu shi: Tai wan xin dian ying (2014)
- SoundtracksPlease Pretend You Would Not Let Me Go
Performed by Tsai Ching
Played in the final scene and end credits
- How long is The Terrorizers?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Languages
- Also known as
- The Terrorist
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $14,633
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