The River (1997)

The River (1997)
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Tsai Ming-Liang's The River, the Taiwanese master's third feature, opens with a chance encounter between Xiao-Kang (Lee Kang-Sheng) and an old friend (Chen Shiang-Chyi), an unexpected meeting that sets this bleak and ultimately disturbing film on its course. Persuaded to accompany his friend to a film set where she works as a production assistant, Xiao-Kang is recruited by the director to play a corpse floating in a polluted river. After the shoot, Xiao-Kang struggles to wash the river's stench off -- and begins to feel a twinge in his neck. Meanwhile, the movie shifts its attention to two other people, a middle-aged woman (Lu Hsiao-Ling) working as an elevator operator in a restaurant, and a man (Miao Tien) who alternates his time at McDonald's and a gay bathhouse. It's eventually revealed that the two are Xiao-Kang's parents, and that the three of them live together in a Taipei apartment building that's as much in need of repair as their relationship. As Xiao-Kang's neck pain lingers, the parents grow increasingly concerned and help him seek relief in both science and superstition, to no avail. A trip to a provincial healer becomes the last resort for the ailing Xiao-Kang and occasions a devastating twist that brings the movie to an unsettling close. ~ Elbert Ventura, Rovi

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Starring:
Lee Kang-ShengLu Hsiao-Ling, (more)
Director(s):
Tsai Ming-Liang
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of The River

Tsai Ming-Liang's The River, the Taiwanese master's third feature, opens with a chance encounter between Xiao-Kang (Lee Kang-Sheng) and an old friend (Chen Shiang-Chyi), an unexpected meeting that sets this bleak and ultimately disturbing film on its course. Persuaded to accompany his friend to a film set where she works as a production assistant, Xiao-Kang is recruited by the director to play a corpse floating in a polluted river. After the shoot, Xiao-Kang struggles to wash the river's stench off -- and begins to feel a twinge in his neck. Meanwhile, the movie shifts its attention to two other people, a middle-aged woman (Lu Hsiao-Ling) working as an elevator operator in a restaurant, and a man (Miao Tien) who alternates his time at McDonald's and a gay bathhouse. It's eventually revealed that the two are Xiao-Kang's parents, and that the three of them live together in a Taipei apartment building that's as much in need of repair as their relationship. As Xiao-Kang's neck pain lingers, the parents grow increasingly concerned and help him seek relief in both science and superstition, to no avail. A trip to a provincial healer becomes the last resort for the ailing Xiao-Kang and occasions a devastating twist that brings the movie to an unsettling close. ~ Elbert Ventura, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
115 mins

Complete Cast of The River


Director(s):
Tsai Ming-Liang
Writer(s):
Tsai Yi-ChunTsai Ming-LiangYang Pi-Ying
Producer(s):
Shiu Shun-chingHsu Li-kong
The River Awards:
  • 1997 - Berlin International Film Festival - Silver Bear - Special Jury Prize
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    Refugio M.

    Other than the fact that water is a re-occurring theme in the movie (people drinking it, ceiling leaks, polluted waters), everything in the movie is very obscure. The sex scenes are in total darkness so you see nothing but darkness and the occasional moan, which makes it really confusing to firgure out who is having sex with who. It is never clear why the main character develops his neck pain when all he did was jump in a polluted river (no small thing of course but still it didn't connect to the rest of the story). His symptoms are those of someone who got an impact on his neck rather than one of a person that swam in polluted waters. While the scenes are sometimes interesting, they go on for far too long and with far too much inaction (sometimes you have scenes of watching people eat, dress, or walk for over three minutes with no dialogue whatsoever). This movie was a waste.

    Yes   |   No

     
    Emilio P.

    who gave this "film" a 4 star rating?

    Yes   |   No

     
    Cindy L.

    And could only get through 20% of it, thus the 2 stars.

    Yes   |   No

     
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