Another View 2009 / Dai wo qu yuan fang / Taiwan 2009
Told with subtlety, the film focuses on a colorblind girl who lives a paradoxically colorful, carefree life in the bosom of her family. But her idyll starts to fade when she hits adolescence. The heroine begins to feel that she and those closest to her are exceptional, yet outsiders nonetheless.
A colorblind girl lives surrounded by lovable characters like her simpleminded father who makes a living sweeping streets, her eternally grumbling grandma, and her gay cousin. Nevertheless, although the world once appeared to her child’s eyes as a carefree and, paradoxically (given her eye impairment), picturesque and colorful place, it gradually pales during the girl’s adolescence. Only as a teenager does she begin to realize that she and those close to her are exceptional and yet outsiders. She becomes anxiously fixated on a story about an island for the colorblind that her cousin recounts to her. The film employs children’s movie forms in order to show the contrast between childhood, when we primarily perceive ourselves and our immediate surroundings, and adolescence, during which we recognize our place in society and the world. Starting with oft-used motifs, the filmmakers succeeded in creating an original work which speaks to multiple generations of viewers.
96 min / Color, 35 mm
European premiere
Director Fu Tien-Yu
/ Screenplay Fu Tien-Yu
/ Dir. of Photography Chou Yi-Wen
/ Music Chen Chien-Chi
/ Editor Liu Chuen-Hsiu
/ Producer Wu Nien-Jen
/ Production Wu’s Production Co.
/ Cast Mei Fang, Lin Po Hung, Lee Yung Yung, Yu Hsin, Waser Chou
/ Contact Good Film Co.
Fu Tien-Yu (b. 1973, Taiwan) began writing domestically-awarded novellas and screenplays immediately after graduating in film production from New York University. In addition to her writing, Fu started a career directing for the Taiwan Public Television Service Station. Her feature debut Somewhere I Have Never Travelled (2009) was several years in the making, the majority of which time was spent looking for suitable nonactors and subsequently training them before the start of shooting. The director says about her film that she strived to align her vision with the demands of the public, thanks to which she created a balanced mix of viewer-appreciated concepts and originally elaborated motifs on adolescents and outsiders.
Good Film Co.
3A, No. 9, San Min Road, 105, Taipei
Taiwan
Phone: +886 2 275 316 35
Fax: +886 2 276 051 88
E-mail: [email protected]
Fu Tien-Yu
Film Director
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