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What Time Is It There?

Original title: Ni na bian ji dian
  • 2001
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 56m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
5.5K
YOUR RATING
Shiang-chyi Chen and Kang-sheng Lee in What Time Is It There? (2001)
Home Video Trailer from Wellspring
Play trailer2:27
2 Videos
14 Photos
DramaRomance

A watch salesman meets a young woman soon leaving for Paris and becomes infatuated, so he begins to change all the clocks in Taipei to Paris time.A watch salesman meets a young woman soon leaving for Paris and becomes infatuated, so he begins to change all the clocks in Taipei to Paris time.A watch salesman meets a young woman soon leaving for Paris and becomes infatuated, so he begins to change all the clocks in Taipei to Paris time.

  • Director
    • Tsai Ming-liang
  • Writers
    • Tsai Ming-liang
    • Pi-ying Yang
  • Stars
    • Kang-sheng Lee
    • Shiang-chyi Chen
    • Yi-ching Lu
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    5.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Tsai Ming-liang
    • Writers
      • Tsai Ming-liang
      • Pi-ying Yang
    • Stars
      • Kang-sheng Lee
      • Shiang-chyi Chen
      • Yi-ching Lu
    • 32User reviews
    • 67Critic reviews
    • 79Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 11 wins & 8 nominations total

    Videos2

    What Time Is It There?
    Trailer 2:27
    What Time Is It There?
    What Time Is It There?
    Trailer 1:26
    What Time Is It There?
    What Time Is It There?
    Trailer 1:26
    What Time Is It There?

    Photos13

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    Top cast16

    Edit
    Kang-sheng Lee
    Kang-sheng Lee
    • Hsiao-Kang
    • (as Lee Kang-Sheng)
    Shiang-chyi Chen
    Shiang-chyi Chen
    • Shiang-Chyi
    • (as Chen Shiang-Chyi)
    Yi-ching Lu
    Yi-ching Lu
    • Hsiao-Kang's Mother
    • (as Lu Yi-Ching)
    Miao Tien
    Miao Tien
    • Hsiao-Kang's Father…
    Liao Ching-Kuo
    • Sorcerer
    Chao-yi Tsai
    • Clock Store Owner
    • (as Tsai Chao-Yi)
    Chen Hsi-Fei
    • Video Tapes Vendor
    Quail Youth-Leigh
    • Vendor's customer
    • (as Lee Yo-Hsin)
    Kuo-Cheng Huang
    • Fat Boy
    • (as Huang Kuo-Cheng)
    Kuei Tsai
    • Prostitute
    • (as Tsai Guei)
    Chin Li-Fang
    • Reporter
    David Ganansia
    • Man at Restaurant
    Chen Chao-jung
    Chen Chao-jung
    • Man in Subway Station
    • (as Chen Chao-Jung)
    Arthur Nauzyciel
    • Man at Telephone Booth
    • (as Arthur Nauczyciel)
    Jean-Pierre Léaud
    Jean-Pierre Léaud
    • Man at the Cemetery
    Cecilia Yip
    Cecilia Yip
    • Chinese Woman in Paris
    • Director
      • Tsai Ming-liang
    • Writers
      • Tsai Ming-liang
      • Pi-ying Yang
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews32

    7.35.5K
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    10

    Featured reviews

    9zetes

    Brilliant, for the most part

    Tsai's unique style gives rise to another film about isolation in urbanization. Hsiao-kang's father has just died, and he and his mother must hold together. He doesn't have much problem doing that, but his mother is going insane with loneliness, so much so that she entirely imbues herself in her religious beliefs. Around this time, Hsaio-kang sells his personal watch to a girl about to fly to Paris. Soon after this, Hsiao-kang becomes obsessed with her (or is it the watch?) and decides to set all his watches (he sells them on the street) to Paris time, and then all the clocks in his house, and then all the clocks he can find. The girl gets stranded in Paris, having lost her plane ticket. The film moves slow and it has little dialogue, as is Tsai's style, but it is incredibly beautiful in its composition, editing, everything. The story is quite great, too. Tsai is a wonderful humanist. The film builds up to a silent crescendo, where the three main characters each endure cold acts of love and failed attempts at communication. When the film closes, all three are asleep, two in Taipei and one in Paris, all three alone.

    Okay, I should have ended it there, but I do have two problems with the film, go figure. First, Hsiao-kang's clock setting is highly amusing at first, but it does get very old after a while. The sequence that ends in the movie theater bathroom is gold, perfect, so Tsai should have just stopped there with that motif. The scene where he sneaks into a clock store and the scene where he resets the clock tower are superfluous. We got the point, and it should have been moving forward. Secondly, I think it's about time Tsai moved on. I love the three films of his I've seen, including The Hole and Vive L'Amour, but the style is the same in all three, as is the theme. Michelangelo Antonioni, who is obviously Tsai's main inspiration (though this particular film has a lot of references to the Truffaut film The 400 Blows, including a very funny cameo by Jean-Pierre Leaud), had a problem moving on from this material, as well, with everything from L'Avventura to Red Desert being very similar (although his style evolved more than Tsai's has), and even after that his films had comparable themes. As much as I like Tsai (and Antonioni), if his next film is just like this, I'm sure it will hurt my presently high opinion of him. 9/10.
    ede58

    Hypnotic,absorbing and touching all in an unusual filmic context.

    This film-known in the US as "What Time is it There?" captured me in ways that I never expected a film to be able to do. Do not see this film seeking plot-linear connections-causal relationships. See this film to slip into a different view of the world we occupy. A world where feelings for one another do not necessarily have results we are aware of. Where the occasion of place and time and circumstance carry weights of understanding without explanation. I can only really tell you this film is slow-and deeply touching; plotless and driven by the regard for the persons in it; visually stunning without any visual trickery. Overall this film went instantly to the top of my own personal "best movies" and I don't even know how to tell you about it. Do see it.
    nunculus

    FORGET PARIS as directed by Hollis Frampton?

    The method is that of the high-school science experiment: Tsai

    Ming-Liang lines the camera up at an odd angle to the action,

    locks it down, and puts together the ingredients of what might be a

    scene--and which often turns out not to be. Organized in blocklike

    scenes that land with a monumental thud, WHAT TIME IS IT

    THERE? fascinates in the way its romantic-comedy premise lands

    on the rocklike surface of its style and evaporates with a quiet hiss.

    It seems there's this kid in Taipei--not a kid really, from some

    angles he looks to be in his thirties, but babyfaced--who falls in

    love with a girl who wants to be a "dual-time" watch. He sells her

    his own watch so she can tell Taiwan time and also time in Paris--

    where she is going for reasons unknown to us. The movie follows

    her journey in the big Western city (which looks and feels exactly

    like a New York City where people speak French) and the kid's

    lonely mania at home, turning all the clocks he can find in Taipei to

    Paris time. The kid's mom, obsessive over the imminent

    reincarnation of the kid's recently deceased father, adds to the

    Jihad-vs.-McWorld quality of Tsai's bicultural comedy.

    There is really only one blatantly laugh-desiring moment in WHAT

    TIME IS IT THERE?--the appearance of a fat flasher holding a

    clock over his genitals, the hands springing to attention at 12:00. (It

    suggests the horror-movie jack-in-the-box moments in a Richard

    Foreman play.) I can scarcely think of another movie so brave in its

    veering from one tone to another as this one. Tsai is one of those

    courageous souls who makes up his own form absolutely from

    scratch. The friend I saw the movie with commented on its

    similarity to Antonioni, but Tsai's style is all his own--and his

    structure too.

    Like Duras, Tsai affords us the time to process the world in ways

    we usually don't get to do in movies--with many of the toxins and

    additives removed. And he invents the relationship of story to

    meaning anew--no easy feat in this post-Memento, post-Mulholland age of high-tech narrative convolution. Tsai's

    stories do not convolute at all; like the substances for which he

    has become semi-hemi-famous, they flow freely. Tsai offers us

    the freedom to look and look again.
    9pjrdct

    Understanding WHAT TIME IS IT THERE? (Part2)

    (...continued from Part1)

    The most significant encounter, of course, was with the young woman heading to Paris, the "there" in What Time is it There? I believe she is a ghost and her contact with Xiao Kang and the exchange of the watch is somehow responsible for his peculiar behavior and experiences. If France can be taken to be a metaphor for death or the "otherworld," then Xiao Kang's strange fascination with all things French can be seen as his desire to understand his father's death. Viewing an old French film becomes a way to catch a glimpse of the "otherworld" where his father might be. Drinking French wine may be yet another method to reach the trance-like state that facilitates communication with his father.

    Tsai explores the various avenues of communication between the living and the dead. He shows the Buddhist rituals, the food offerings, burning ghost money, etc., intended to establish contact or at least help the deceased. He shows how non-spiritual ways such as memories, mementos, and imagination are all employed to keep that person "alive." Xiao Kang's tampering with time is his idiosyncratic approach. We even see him using an antenna, a communication device, to adjust a giant clock. In return for these efforts the deceased is expected to communicate to the living by way of signs or in dreams. We see Xiao Kang crying in his sleep-perhaps a visitation by his father in such a dream. His mother desperately looks for signs of her husband's return, even if it's only as a cockroach or a fish.

    Tsai points out in this film that contacting the dead is a difficult and frustrating endeavor only leading to more suffering. He adds that the dead are having an equally difficult and frustrating time communicating with us. Moreover, they are having trouble adjusting to their new reality-at least until reincarnation occurs. The young woman in Paris is seen wandering aimlessly and communicating only with difficulty with the Parisians. Her aborted telephone calls can be seen as attempts to contact the living, probably loved ones. There is evidence that these loved ones are somehow getting through to her; the snack plate she nibbles on in her hotel room uncannily resembles food offerings to the dead. The overwhelming feeling we get from her experience is that of frustration and profound sadness. Her exhaustion and eventual collapse may indicate her resigned acceptance of death.

    Xiao Kang's father though appears to be farther along in the process. He seems calm and sure in his actions. His struggle appears over. His walking toward the Ferris wheel is deliberate, reincarnation imminent. The film ends here on this hopeful note.

    What Time is it There? has much in common with Tsai Ming-Liang's earlier films. He again explores the difficulty in communicating or establishing connections with others. Only this time he included the dead in his universe and in the process created a rich and mysterious work. Despite an elliptical and metaphoric structure, and despite an imperfect understanding of Buddhist philosophy, upon reflection the meaning of What Time is it There? emerges slowly but surely.
    9crossbow0106

    Fascinating

    Tsai Ming-Liang is a Director you either "get" or don't. His work reminds me to a point of Jim Jarmusch, their pacing is similar. If you've ever seen and liked Jarmusch's "Stranger Than Paradise", you will probably like this. The story introduces you to people who lead mostly ordinary lives, just in Taipei. Ming-Liang's use of the long shot (setting up a scene and waiting for something to happen-usually, very little does) is very important. I think it adds to the simplicity of the story, ostensibly about a watch salesman who sells the young lady the watch he is wearing. He then changes the clocks in Taipei to Parisian time, where the young lady is going on vacation. The film also captures the side story of the watch salesman's mom, who just lost her husband. She looks for ways for him to "come back". It is a bit sad, but also touching. She almost steals the film. For lovers of independent film, a must. If you liked "The Departed", forget it. I'd like to add two things: The interlude "The Skywalk Is Gone", appended on the "Goodbye, Dragon Inn" DVD, is a 20 minute short which is also worthwhile, continues the story. Lastly, "The Wayward Cloud", the real sequel, is not quite as good (I give it 7 out of 10). It has images of fairly explicit pornography. I do recommend it, but it, like all of Ming-Liang's films, is uncompromising. The only major complaint I have with it is the mother is barely in it. I miss her. I want to tell you how it ends, but I can't, I can't spoil it. In the theater watching "The Wayward Cloud", the guy sitting behind me was flat out snoring. I was wide awake. All in all, "What Time Is It There" cemented Tsai Ming-Liang's reputation as a force to be reckoned with. He deserves the praise.

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    Related interests

    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Ingrid Bergman and Humphrey Bogart in Casablanca (1942)
    Romance

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The sequence in the cinema takes place in the same venue as Goodbye, Dragon Inn (2003), and uses some of the same shots.
    • Quotes

      Woman in Paris: Oh, Taiwan. I've been there. It's fun.

    • Alternate versions
      111min version
    • Connections
      Features The 400 Blows (1959)

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    FAQ18

    • How long is What Time Is It There??Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 26, 2001 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Taiwan
      • France
    • Languages
      • Mandarin
      • French
      • Min Nan
      • English
    • Also known as
      • What Time Is It Over There?
    • Filming locations
      • Taipei Hesien, Taiwan
    • Production companies
      • Arena Films
      • Homegreen Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $195,760
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $27,936
      • Jan 21, 2002
    • Gross worldwide
      • $265,477
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 56m(116 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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