The Assassin

Shu Qi is killing it

I posted some pix of her Cannes red carpet dress here. But this dress is better. :wink:

Woman warrior Shu Qi in The Assassin slays Cannes, wins over critics
Published on May 22, 2015 11:25 AM


Taiwanese actress Shu Qi (right) and director Hou Hsiao-Hsien at the screening of Nie Yinniang (The Assassin) during the 68th Cannes Film Festival on May 21, 2015. – PHOTO: EPA


(From left) Cast members Chang Chen, Shu Qi, Fang-Yi Sheu and Nikki Hsin-Ying Hsieh on the red carpet as they arrive for the screening of the film The Assassin at the 68th Cannes Film Festival on May 21, 2015. – PHOTO: REUTERS


A film still provided by the Cannes Film Festival on May 21, 2015, shows Taiwanese actress Shu Qi in a scene of Nie Yinniang (The Assassin). – PHOTO: EPA


A film still provided by the Cannes Film Festival on May 21, 2015 shows Taiwanese actress Shu Qi in a scene of Nie Yinniang (The Assassin). – PHOTO: EPA

CANNES (Reuters, Agence France-Presse) - Taiwanese director Hou Hsiao-Hsien said on Thursday he had not wanted to make the customary kickfest-style martial arts movie, and Nie Yinniang (The Assassin) shown in competition at Cannes is anything but.

It stars Shu Qi in the title role as a trained killer during the Tang dynasty who jumps on her prey from roofs or trees and kills them with a single blow of her dagger.

With the lightning instincts drilled into her by a nun who kidnapped her as a young girl and trained her in the martial arts, Shu Qi’s character, who is called “the assassin”, can deflect swords flung at her and lay low a squad of imperial soldiers.

A difference from the usual martial arts film, though, is that the combat and killing take place within a gorgeously photographed costume drama that transports the viewer back to a vanished time.

And the combat looks plausible, not fantasised, even if the idea of a woman killing so many soldiers sounds like a tale from the Tang dynasty literature from which it was taken.

“I’ve seen a lot of kung fu films and I particularly like Japanese samurai films because the combats are so realistic,” Hou told a news conference. “There are very few tricks in Japanese martial arts films, that’s why I wanted to do my film in this way. It was very complex for the actresses in the combat scenes, while working on the film they ended up with a lot of cuts and bruises.”

Shu Qi said Hou had put huge demands on her. “I nearly broke down at one stage, I thought we might have a clash because it was so demanding,” she said.

Hou said the film had been expensive to make by his standards, with a budget of US$15 million (S$20 million), but even if it failed at the box office he would not want to start making films that were more mainstream or commercial. “In this day and age, when Hollywood reigns supreme, compare that with the time of the New Wave (cinema), and there were very interesting, different films. We don’t want the cinema to become poorer in the future,” he said.

Critics unanimously hailed the movie’s beauty but were divided over its accessibility and its chances in the competition for the Palme d’Or. Many tweeted it was an arthouse “masterpiece” that deserved the top award.

Trade publication Variety called the film “a mesmerising slow burn of a martial-arts movie that…achieves breathtaking new heights of compositional elegance”.

The New York Times said Hou “blew the roof off one of the biggest theatres here with The Assassin, a staggeringly lovely period film set in ninth-century China”.

But others, including trade magazine The Hollywood Reporter, said “its refinement may weigh against it for fans hungering after spectacular kung fu”.

Opens across the Greater China region on 27 Aug

Assassin to open HK Cine Fan Summer Fest

By Kevin Ma

Mon, 20 July 2015, 09:30 AM (HKT)
Festival News

The Assassin is set to open the 2015 edition of the Cine Fan Summer International Film Festival (11-25 Aug), organised by the Hong Kong International Film Festival Society Limited .

In addition to attending the festival’s opening night on 11 Aug, director HOU Hsiao-hsien will also give a master class after the film’s second screening. The film opens across the Greater China region on 27 Aug.

This year’s closing film is Woody ALLEN’s Irrational Man, which had its world premiere at the Cannes Film Festival. Allen’s Magic in the Moonlight was last year’s opening film.

Though this year’s line-up doesn’t include any new local title, its Fest Faves section includes six Asian titles: SONO Sion 's Love & Peace , MIIKE Takashi 's Yakuza Apocalypse , Japanese youth comedy Flying Colors , NAKAMURA Yoshihiro 's Prophecy , as well as Bollywood films PK and Piku.

The festival is also holding a retrospective dedicated to Taipei-based Malaysian auteur TSAI Ming-liang , with four feature films and two instalments of his Walker short series.

After its Asian premiere at the Taipei Film Festival , the restored version of King HU 's A Touch of Zen (1970) will play at the festival’s Restored Classics section. The Back to the Screen programme also includes a 35mm screening of IWAI Shunji 's Love Letter (1995).

Good line-up - Sono Sion, Takashi Miike, restored King Hu, and I’ve been eager to see PK.

Trailer oficial de The Assassin (Nie yin niang) HD

//youtu.be/d_msnMB_kYE

2 - Hou Hsiao Hsien -The Assassin 2015 Trailer 2

//youtu.be/cQ_AcOHMsi4

beaten out by Our Times…

Our Times does not look like something I’ll see.

The Assassin opens second-placed in Taipei

By Kevin Ma
Wed, 02 September 2015, 15:30 PM (HKT)
Box Office News

HOU Hsiao-hsien 's The Assassin opened in second place at the Taipei box office as local youth comedy Our Times remained at the top for the third consecutive weekend.

From 25 cinemas in Taipei, the wuxia drama earned NT$7.38 million (US$227,000) over three days. According to local media, the film earned approximately NT$20 million (US$616,000) from 83 locations nationwide.

Between Friday and Sunday, Our Times earned NT$15.5 million (US$477,000) in Taipei for a total of NT$89.5 million (US$2.76 million). Distributor and co-producer Hualien International Film Co Ltd claims on its Facebook page that the Frankie CHEN film has made NT$220 million (US$6.78 million) as of Monday.

Fantasy comedy Open! Open! – based on the convenience store mascot character – opened in ninth place, earning NT$980,000 (US$30,200) from six Taipei locations on Saturday and Sunday. Including preview shows, the film has made NT$2.75 million (US$84,800) in the capital.

The official release of Open! Open! was delayed at the last-minute when Typhoon Soudelor had a huge effect on the box office early last month.

From eight Taipei locations, Ringo LAM 's Wild City earned NT$410,000 (US$12,600) over three days.

To the Fore has made NT$25.6 million (US$789,1000). Local horror film The Bride has made NT$5.78 million (US$178,000). Dark comedy Laundryman has:1 has made NT$4.42 million (US$136,000). The Crossing II has made NT$4.15 million (US$128,000).

All You Need Is Love , Hero , Salut d’amour , Paris Holiday and Vacation open this weekend.

In Hong Kong, local comedy Undercover Duet was the top new film as Pixels and Inside Out remained at the top of the box office.

Opening in third place, Undercover Duet earned HK$3.05 million (US$394,000) from 35 locations over four days. The long-delayed comedy stars Ronald CHENG as an undercover cop assigned to convince an old schoolmate (played by director and co-writer Mark WU ) to testify in court.

Topping the box office for the second weekend, Pixels earned HK$4.08 million (US$527,000) between Thursday and Sunday. The sci-fi comedy has made HK$13.6 million (US$1.75 million).

Local horror anthology Knock Knock! Who’s There? opened in fifth place, earning HK$1.68 million (US$217,000) over four days plus early previews. The film is the first feature solo-directed by actress Carrie NG .

From eight locations, Hou’s The Assassin earned HK$550,000 (US$71,000) over four days. The film is distributed by Golden Scene Co Ltd .

Japan’s Hero opened in seventh place, earning HK$1.29 million (US$167,000) from 20 locations over four days. In 2007, the first Hero earned HK$4.45 million (US$574,000) during its theatrical run.

CHOI Dong-hoon | 's Assassination opened in ninth place, earning HK$759,000 (US$97,900) from 22 locations over four days plus early previews.

Three years ago, Choi’s The Thieves (2012) earned HK$2.70 million (US$348,000) during its theatrical run.

Opening in six locations, The Emperor in August earned HK$218,000 (US$28,100) over four days.

Chinese comedy Hollywood Adventures opened with only HK$77,400 (US$9,980) over four days.

Inside Out has made HK$63 million (US$8.13 million). Wild City has made HK$4.63 million (US$598,000). To The Fore has earned HK$9.55 million (US$1.23 million).

A Tale of Three Cities , Assassination Classroom , Love Detective and Cat Funeral open this weekend.

Taiwan’s Oscar rep for Academy Award Best Foreign Film

China and Taiwan pick Oscar reps

By Kevin Ma
Fri, 11 September 2015, 00:00 AM (HKT)
Awards News

China and Taiwan have announced their respective representatives for this year’s Academy Award Best Foreign Film race.

China is sending Wolf Totem , Jean-Jacques ANNAUD’s Cultural Revolution-era drama about a young man who becomes fascinated by wolves while living in Mongolia. The China-France co-production earned RMB699 million (US$109 million) during the Lunar New Year holiday.

This is the second consecutive year China is sending a film by a French film-maker to the Oscars. Last year, Philippe MUYL’s The Nightingale (2013) joined the race, but did not make it to the shortlist.

In Taiwan, the Ministry of Culture decided at a special meeting that HOU Hsiao-hsien 's The Assassin will be its representative at the Academy Awards this year. The announcement was made by the Motion Picture and Drama Association.

According to the association, a total of 13 films including Thanatos, Drunk , Exit , The Wonderful Wedding and Our Times were submitted for consideration. The association says the committee chose Hou’s film for its top-notch production values and innovative cinematic style.

This is the third Hou film to be submitted to the Academy Awards’ Best Foreign Film race, after A City of Sadness (1989) and Flowers of Shanghai (1998). In May, the wuxia drama earned a Best Director prize for Hou at the Cannes Film Festival.

Last year, Taiwan submitted Midi Z 's Ice Poison to the Academy Awards. It did not make the shortlist.

Totally called this. At least it guarantees some U.S. distribution.
[QUOTE=GeneChing;1286430]Ah…the Oscar race. My forecast is that Taiwan submits The Assassin for Best Foreign.[/QUOTE]

Wolf Totem opens in SF this weekend. I was invited to a screener and was sorely tempted, but I’m just too busy right now. And then the screener was cancelled.

U.S. release Oct 16, 2015

From our good friends at Well Go USA


The Assassin


Synopsis
Back with his first film in 8 years, legendary Taiwanese director Hou Hsiao-hsien wowed this year’s Cannes Film Festival (where he won Best Director) with his awe-inspiring THE ASSASSIN - a wondrous take on the traditional wuxia film. The story is simple, if elusive - in 9th-century China, Nie Yinniang is a young woman who was abducted in childhood from a decorated general and raised by a nun who trained her in the martial arts. After 13 years of exile, she is returned to the land of her birth as an exceptional assassin, with orders to kill her betrothed husband-to-be. She must confront her parents, her memories, and her long-repressed feelings in a choice to sacrifice the man she loves or break forever with the sacred way of the righteous assassins. Rich with shimmering, breathing texture and punctuated by brief but unforgettable bursts of action, THE ASSASSIN is a martial arts film like none made before it.

Director: Hou Hsiao-Hsien
Cast: Chang Chen , Shu Qi , Zhou Yun , Tsumabuki Satoshi
Producer: Hou Hsiao-Hsien , Liao Ching-Song
Genre: Drama, Foreign
Run Time: 107 mins.
Theatrical Date: Oct 16, 2015
Original Language: Mandarin

USA Theater Location

October 16, 2015
NEW YORK CITY
IFC Center
323 6th Ave
New York, NY 10014
(212) 924-7771

Film Society of Lincoln Center
70 Lincoln Center Plaza
New York, NY 10023
(212) 875-5610

LOS ANGELES
Laemmle Playhouse 7
673 E Colorado Blvd
Pasadena, CA 91101

Laemmle Ahrya Fine Arts
8556 Wilshire Blvd.
B.H., CA 90211

October 22, 2015
MIAMI
GEMS - Miami International Film Festival
300 NE 2nd Ave
Miami, FL 33132

October 23, 2015
CHICAGO
AMC River East 21
322 East Illinois Street
Chicago, IL 60611
(312) 596-0333

Music Box Theatre
3733 N Southport Ave
Chicago, IL 60613

NEW YORK CITY
Cinema Arts Centre
423 Park Ave
Huntington, NY 11743

October 28, 2015
ST. LOUIS
RagTag Cinema Cafe
10 Hitt St
Columbia, MO 65201
(573) 441-8504

WINCHESTER
Alamo Drafthouse Cinema
181 Kernstown Commons Blvd
Winchester, VA 22602
(540) 313-4060

October 29, 2015
MIAMI
Miami Beach CInematheque
1130 Washington Ave
Miami Beach, FL 33139
(305) 673-4567

October 30, 2015
MIAMI
Tower Theater
1508 SW 8th St
Miami, FL 33135
(305) 237-2463

November 11, 2015
DENVER
International Film Series
1801 Colorado Ave
Boulder, CO 80309
(303) 492-1531

November 12, 2015
OKLAHOMA CITY
Oklahoma City Museum of Art
415 Couch Dr
Oklahoma City, OK 73102
(405) 236-3100

November 13, 2015
PHILADELPHIA
Landmark Ritz Theater
214 Walnut St
Philadelphia, PA 19106
(215) 440-1184

December 10, 2015
COLUMBUS
Wexner Center for the Arts
1871 N High St
Columbus, OH 43210

CANADA Theater Location

October 30, 2015
TORONTO
Bell Lightbox
350 King St W
Toronto, ON M5V 3X5, Canada
+1 416-599-8433

VANCOUVER
Vancity Theatre
1181 Seymour St
Vancouver, BC V6B 2E8, Canada
+1 604-683-3456

Hold the phone…no S.F. Bay Area showings? :mad:

There’s also a listing on AMC

The Assassin

Synopsis

9th century China. 10-year-old general’s daughter Nie Yinniang is abducted by a nun who initiates her into the martial arts, transforming her into an exceptional assassin charged with eliminating cruel and corrupt local governors. One day, having failed in a task, she is sent back by her mistress to the land of her birth, with orders to kill the man to whom she was promised - a cousin who now leads the largest military region in North China. After 13 years of exile, the young woman must confront her parents, her memories and her long-repressed feelings. A slave to the orders of her mistress, Nie Yinniang must choose: sacrifice the man she loves or break forever with the sacred way of the righteous assassins.

Running Time
1 hr 47 min

Release Date
October 23, 2015

Confusing…:confused:

Well Go USA’s official U.S. trailer

//youtu.be/YO2XULtvHSg

The Golden Horse Awards nomination committee showed plenty of love for local productions this year as two Taiwan films lead the shortlist.

As may be expected, HOU Hsiao-hsien 's The Assassin scored the most nominations with 11, including Best Film, Best Director, Best Actress (SHU Qi ), Best Adapted Screenplay and Best Action Choreography.

First forum review!

Ahhh, the ever-gorgeous Shu Qi, who has been in so many mediocre films yet still comes out unscathed. I think she’s so gorgeous that she distracts the filmmakers from their task. And yes, her gorgeousness is a reference to her appearance with Jackie in Gorgeous.

This film is gorgeous. It is a cinematic masterpiece for director Hsiao-Hsien Hou. The panoramic landscapes, the lavish costumes, the intricately detailed sets, all gorgeous. Every shot is a stunning composition of light and shadow, and the camera lingers on each frame with ponderous and quiet respect. From a film-making perspective, it’s just exquisite film-making, the kind that film students will gush over for years. It reminds me of Kurosawa’s early color films, dazzling cinematography for its subtlety and sublimity.

As a martial arts film, it sucks. The fights are few and not very sophisticated. The pacing of the film never builds to any sort of action crescendo. There’s no big final fight - the film ends on quite a different note entirely. Martial arts fans will be disappointed. I really wanted to love this, but it’s so not about martial arts. It is akin to Ashes of Time in this way, a glacial pace that makes for grand cinema d’arte, but not for the martial genre. Like I said on my Ashes review"
[QUOTE=GeneChing;926307]
If you’re into art film and martial arts, it’s a must see.

If you just want to see some ass kicking kung fu, skip this one.
[/QUOTE]

I would enjoy seeing this with subtitles on the big screen as I’m sure it’s stunning. It’s terrible on a Chinese-only subtitled Chinatown DVD. I suspect it won’t make it to the finals for the Oscars.

AMC now lists participating theaters on its Asian-Pacific Cinema page, but I’m not confident that these are all guaranteed to show the films.

participating > theatres
Arizona

AMC Arizona Center 24
AMC Centerpoint 11

California

AMC Atlantic Times Square 14
AMC Covina 17
AMC Cupertino Square 16
AMC Fashion Valley 18
AMC La Jolla 12
AMC Metreon 16
AMC Mission Valley 20
AMC Ontario Mills 30
AMC Orange 30
AMC Plaza Bonita 14
AMC Puente Hills 20
AMC Tustin 14 @ The District

Colorado

AMC Arapahoe Crossing 16

Florida

AMC Sunset Place 24
AMC West Shore 14

Georgia

AMC Sugarloaf Mills 18

Illinois

AMC Loews Woodridge 18
AMC River East 21
AMC Showplace Niles 12

Indiana

AMC Showplace Bloomington 11

Kentucky

AMC Newport On The Levee 20

Maryland

AMC Loews Rio Cinemas 18

Massachusetts

AMC Loews Boston Common 19

Michigan

AMC Star Southfield 20

Minnesota

AMC Inver Grove 16

Missouri

AMC Dine-in Theatres West Olive 16

Nevada

AMC Town Square 18

New Jersey

AMC Loews Cherry Hill 24
AMC Loews Jersey Gardens 20

New York

AMC Empire 25
AMC Loews Bay Terrace 6

Ohio

AMC Lennox Town Center 24

Pennsylvania

AMC 309 Cinema 9
AMC Loews Waterfront 22

Texas

AMC Grapevine Mills 30 with Dine-in Theatres
AMC Studio 30

Virginia

AMC Hoffman Center 22

Washinton

AMC Loews Alderwood Mall 16
AMC Pacific Place 11

Wisconsin

AMC Mayfair Mall 18

:slight_smile: Wow, not so good ~ forsaking kick ass in a titled “martial arts” nomination for the sake of ART. So not necessary. Salted Wounds.

Taiwanese filmmakers for the most part seem to have gone totally into artsy-f@rtsy cinema. Unfortunate, since in the 1970s into the early-to-mid-80s, Taiwan was a big hub of Kung fu filmmaking, probably even outpacing Hong Kong in that regard as far as sheer volume.

Several years ago, one of the Taiwanese art house movies I saw was Goodbye, Dragon Inn, about an old Taipei cinema showing King Hu’s Dragon Gate Inn one last time before closing for good. I thought it would be a tribute of sorts to that classic movie, but it was just weird (and depressing and boring). I think that Taiwanese filmmakers are trying their best to stay as far away from KF or MA cinema as possible, even when it’s implied, and making pretentious movies seems the way to do it.

Alas, don’t misread me.

The Assassin is a great film. One might even go so far to say it is a cinematic masterpiece. It’s just not a great martial arts film. Don’t go to see it expecting to see great martial arts. Go to see it expecting a gorgeous film. And if you are a true fan of the martial arts genre, it’s a must see. It’s impact on our genre as a Foreign Film Oscar contender makes it very significant.

Well Go USA has expanded their theatrical distribution.

USA Theater Location
October 16, 2015
NEW YORK CITY
IFC Center
323 6th Ave
New York, NY 10014
(212) 924-7771

Film Society of Lincoln Center
70 Lincoln Center Plaza
New York, NY 10023
(212) 875-5610

LOS ANGELES
Laemmle Playhouse 7
673 E Colorado Blvd
Pasadena, CA 91101

Laemmle Ahrya Fine Arts
8556 Wilshire Blvd.
B.H., CA 90211

October 22, 2015
MIAMI
GEMS - Miami International Film Festival
300 NE 2nd Ave
Miami, FL 33132

October 23, 2015
CHICAGO
AMC River East 21
322 East Illinois Street
Chicago, IL 60611
(312) 596-0333

Music Box Theatre
3733 N Southport Ave
Chicago, IL 60613

NEW YORK CITY
Cinema Arts Centre
423 Park Ave
Huntington, NY 11743

SAN FRANCISCO / BAY AREA
Landmark Shattuck Cinemas
2230 Shattuck Ave
Berkeley, CA 94704
(510) 644-2992

AMC Metreon 16
35 4th St Suite 3000
San Francisco, CA 94103

Camera 3
288 S Second St
San Jose, CA 95113
(408) 294-3334

LOS ANGELES
AMC Atlantic Time Square
450 N Atlantic Blvd
Monterey Park, CA 91754
(626) 407-0240

Edwards University Town Center 6
4245 Campus Drive, University Center
Irvine, CA 92612
(844) 462-7342

CHARLOTTE
Regal Cinemas Ballantyne Village 5
14815 Ballantyne Village Way
Charlotte, NC 28277
(844) 462-7342

KNOXVILLE
Regal Cinemas Downtown West 8
1640 Downtown W Blvd
Knoxville, TN 37919
(844) 462-7342

SCOTTSDALE
Harkins Theatres Camelview 5
7001 E Highland Ave
Scottsdale, AZ 85251
(480) 947-8778

October 28, 2015
ST. LOUIS
RagTag Cinema Cafe
10 Hitt St
Columbia, MO 65201
(573) 441-8504

WINCHESTER
Alamo Drafthouse Cinema
181 Kernstown Commons Blvd
Winchester, VA 22602
(540) 313-4060

October 29, 2015
MIAMI
Miami Beach CInematheque
1130 Washington Ave
Miami Beach, FL 33139
(305) 673-4567

NEW YORK CITY
Time & Space Ltd
434 Columbia St
Hudson, NY 12534
(518) 822-8448

October 30, 2015
MIAMI
Tower Theater - Miami
1508 SW 8th St
Miami, FL 33135
(305) 237-2463

Cinema Paradiso
503 SE 6th St
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33301
(954) 525-3456

Lake Worth Playhouse
713 Lake Ave
Lake Worth, FL 33460
(561) 586-6410

SAN FRANCISCO / BAY AREA
Pageant Theatre
351 E 6th St
Chico, CA 95928
(530) 343-0663

Landmark Shattuck Cinemas
2230 Shattuck Ave
Berkeley, CA 94704
(510) 644-2992

SEATTLE
Pickford Film Center
1318 Bay St
Bellingham, WA 98225
(360) 738-0735

SIFF Cinema Egyptian
805 East Pine Street
Seattle, WA 98122
(206) 324-9996

CHICAGO
Tivoli Theatre
5021 Highland Ave
Downers Grove, IL 60515
(630) 968-0219

PHILADELPHIA
The Colonial Theatre
227 Bridge St
Phoenixville, PA 19460
(610) 917-1228

GRAND RAPIDS
Celebration! Cinema Grand Rapids Woodland
3195 28th Street SE
Grand Rapids, MI 49512

WASHINGTON, D.C.
AFI Silver Theatre
AFI Silver
Silver Spring, MD 20910

Landmark Theatres - E Street Cinema
55 11th St NW
Washington, DC 20004

OMAHA
Film Streams
1340 Mike Fahey St
Omaha, NE 68102
(402) 933-0259

AMHERST
Amherst Cinema
28 Amity St
Amherst, MA 01002
(413) 253-2547

SALT LAKE CITY
Tower Theater - Salt Lake City
876 E 900 S
Salt Lake City, UT 84105
(801) 321-0310

November 3, 2015
INDIANAPOLIS
Indiana University Cinema
1213 E 7th St
Bloomington, IN 47406
(812) 855-7632

November 6, 2015
IOWA
FilmScene
118 E College St
Iowa City, IA 52240
(319) 358-2555

NEW MEXICO
The Screen
1600 St Michaels Dr
Santa Fe, NM 87505
(505) 473-6494

BOISE
The Flicks
646 W Fulton St
Boise, ID 83702
(208) 342-4288

ALBUQUERQUE
Guild Cinema
3405 Central Ave NE
Albuquerque, NM 87106
(505) 255-1848

SALEM
CinemaSalem
1 E India Square Mall
Salem, MA 01970
(978) 744-1400

November 11, 2015
DENVER
International Film Series
1801 Colorado Ave
Boulder, CO 80309
(303) 492-1531

November 12, 2015
OKLAHOMA CITY
Oklahoma City Museum of Art
415 Couch Dr
Oklahoma City, OK 73102
(405) 236-3100

November 13, 2015
PHILADELPHIA
Landmark Ritz Theater
214 Walnut St
Philadelphia, PA 19106
(215) 440-1184

Zoetropolis Art House
315 W James St
Lancaster, PA 17603

CHICAGO
Normal Theater
209 W North St
Normal, IL 61761
(309) 454-9720

PORTLAND
Liberty Theatre
315 NE 4th Ave
Camas, WA 98607
(360) 859-9555

GRAND RAPIDS
Urban Institute for Contemporary Arts
2 Fulton St W
Grand Rapids, MI 49503
(616) 454-7000

November 20, 2015
NASHVILLE
Belcourt Theatre
2102 Belcourt Ave
Nashville, TN 37212
(615) 846-3150

November 27, 2015
HOUSTON
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
1001 Bissonnet St
Houston, TX 77005

November 28, 2015
NEW MEXICO
Fountain Theater
2469 Calle De Guadalupe
Old Mesilla, NM 88046
(575) 524-8287

December 4, 2015
PITTSBURGH
Harris Theater
809 Liberty Ave
Pittsburgh, PA 15222
(412) 681-5449

December 10, 2015
COLUMBUS
Wexner Center for the Arts
1871 N High St
Columbus, OH 43210

CANADA Theater Location
October 30, 2015
TORONTO
Bell Lightbox
350 King St W
Toronto, ON M5V 3X5, Canada
+1 416-599-8433

VANCOUVER
Vancity Theatre
1181 Seymour St
Vancouver, BC V6B 2E8, Canada
+1 604-683-3456

November 6, 2015
MONTREAL
Cinema du Parc
3575 Av du Parc
Montréal, QC H2X 2H8, Canada
+1 514-281-1900

November 13, 2015
ALBERTA
Plaza Theatre
1133 Kensington Rd NW
Calgary, AB T2N 3P4, Canada
+1 403-283-2222

OTTAWA
Mayfair Theatre
1074 Bank St
Ottawa, ON K1S 3X3, Canada

Here comes some buzz for the U.S. release

The critics are raving.

Cannes Best Director Winner On His First Martial Arts Film, The Future Of Movies
by Carman Tse in Arts & Entertainment on Oct 15, 2015 12:35 pm


Shu Qi as Nie Yinniang in Hou Hsiao-hsien’s ‘The Assassin’ (Well Go USA)

It had been eight years since director Hou Hsiao-hsien last released a feature-length film until This Assassin this year, but fans of the Taiwanese master will likely find that the wait was worth it. Serving as a leader for both the Taipei Film Festival and the Golden Horse Film Festival (the Chinese equivalent of the Oscars of which The Assassin, by the way, has eleven nominations), the de facto cultural ambassador of the island nation was simply too busy to find the time to make his follow-up to Flight Of The Red Balloon (2007) until recently.

When it finally seemed that his martial arts epic had finally taken off, questions lingered as to how the project would actually unfold. How would Hou—who gained international recognition for autobiographical meditations on Taiwan’s 20th century history like A City Of Sadness (1989) and The Boys From Fengkuei (1983)—tackle the material? Wuxia, the martial arts genre known for its swordplay and being set in the antiquity, is one of the most familiar genres in Chinese film. But for a director whose work is known for its elliptical narratives, long takes, and abstract approach, it was an odd match. Thankfully, the result is one of the year’s best films and one of the best in his decades-spanning career—it also netted him the Best Director award at this year’s Cannes Film Festival.


‘The Assassin’ director Hou Hsiao-hsien (Well Go USA)

In The Assassin, Shu Qi plays Nie Yinniang, a highly skilled assassin in the Tang Dynasty who’s tasked with killing the governor of a semi-autonomous province (Chang Chen), a man to whom she was once betrothed. Hou often stresses that he frequently forgoes rehearsals or much directing of his actors before filming, preferring to keep them loose to achieve the realism he strives for. But for a wuxia film, fight choreography and preparation is a necessity, and that presented its own challenges with the cast of The Assassin. “The main issue was that two of our main actresses, Shu Qi and Zhou Yun, were not professionally trained martial artists,” the director told LAist at a recent roundtable discussion. “We would just shoot everything in bits and pieces.”

Otherwise, it was business as usual on the set. “[Shu Qi and Chang Chen] read the script and they figured it out on their own,” he said of the chemistry between his two leads. He had previously worked with both in Three Times (2005) when they the two played lovers across three separate time eras. “They never had any questions for me.”

Although Hou was able to shoot The Assassin and its gorgeous landscapes and luscious interiors in his preferred format of 35mm, he acknowledged that the technology had drastically changed since he returned to filmmaking. For his next project he’s considering experimenting with digital cameras. “The language of visual expression might change,” he said of the technology, which would allow the filmmaker more manipulation of the image and expand what he felt was idiosyncratic and expressive filmmaking. “There’s a lot of flexibility and freedom. The possibilities are very interesting.”

And even though this digitization means the the movie-going experience has become more individual, with home viewing and mobile devices, Hou feels that the technology also provides the means to bring the audiences back into movie theaters. “Filmmakers want to make sure films are communal experiences, that these are events,” he said. “I think it’s possible that these films become so advanced and so unique that you have to experience them in a theater.”

Translations provided by Eugene Suen.

The Assassin opens this Friday in New York (at IFC Center and Film Society Of Lincoln Center) and Los Angeles (at Laemmle Playhouse 7 in Pasadena and Laemmle Ahrya Fine Arts in Beverly Hills). Hou Hsiao-hsien will be in-person for Q&As this Friday and Saturday in Los Angeles. Click here for more information on release dates across the country.

A Most Unusual And Beautiful ‘Assassin’
October 15, 2015 5:03 PM ET
Ella Taylor


Shu Qi in a scene from The Assassin.
Courtesy of SpotFilms

The Assassin, a gorgeous new work by Taiwanese filmmaker Hou Hsiao-Hsien, is a martial arts film influenced by Hong Kong wu xia films and short novels based on early Chinese legend. The movie, which won Best Director at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, has a few short, sharp fight sequences involving knives with a vicious curve to them. But it won’t surprise anyone familiar with Hou’s oeuvre that he invites us to slow down, to watch and listen to what goes on, and doesn’t, in between. Or that the titular killer is a woman, though the nastiest of her adversaries can expect no mercy on that account.

Played with serene self-possession by Hou regular Shu Qi — whose full lips, hard stare and lithe stride carry echoes of Angelina Jolie — Nie Yinniang was abducted as a child from the unruly Chinese province of Weibo and trained to kill by a nun (Sheu Fang-Yi) who doubles as a warrior princess and quite possibly an agent of the Empire. We see early on that Yinniang excels at her job, but once she’s under orders to return to Weibo and take out its governor Tian Ji’an (Chang), it soon becomes apparent that she’s not fully committed to its rough justice, not least because the two were once betrothed.

Set in the ninth century, The Assassin is a legend, complete with curses and a bird allegory that unlocks the source of Yinniang’s inner tumult. Yet the tale is told in realist language, with fervent attention to period rituals of eating, drinking, and bathing, and is opulently costumed in red and deep rose with touches of mint green. Of the women, only Yinniang appears in business attire, all in black with soft trousers that allow her to whirl around and stalk her hapless prey on rooftops, in forests of silver birch, in ornately upholstered palaces. The other women glide around like dolls, speaking their lines with ceremonial formality. Yinniang gets to move, and that is the source of her power, and her palpable unease.

If you haven’t seen any of Hou’s films (I recommend starting with his brilliant 1989 political drama A City of Sadness), the progression from one seemingly unedited scene to the next can seem slow, even static. Between the lines of the interior long shots that Hou favors (except, perhaps, in the impish Flight of the Red Balloon, his only film shot in the West, with Juliette Binoche in the lead), a complicated political economy of long-repressed feeling is at work that deepens without fanfare into repressed political conflict. Will Yinniang follow orders and carry out the harsh retributive justice embedded in her job description, or obey the ties of love, blood and family that draw her back home?

There’s a way to read her choice as a rebuke to all the woman warriors currently rampaging through Hollywood’s movie franchises, as if feminism were a matter of doing what the boys do, only more so. The most tacit and elliptical of filmmakers, Hou would never say so. The nearest thing to exposition in The Assassin comes in a black-and-white prologue that shows who and what shaped Yinniang into a toxic avenger. Like many of his films, The Assassin may be said to pursue an underground obsession with Taiwan’s tortured relationship to the mainland that, on and off, has dominated it for centuries. You don’t need any of this to fall in love and abandon yourself to the movie’s exquisite landscapes, at once serene and melodramatic, revel in Hou’s stealthy cutaways to quivering blossoms, or listen to the birdsong and the wind ruffling trees that counterpoint the bloodshed. With and without allegory, to watch The Assassin is to be carried along in the river of life, in all its ecstasy and terror.

Here’s more…

…there’s even more but I’m only cherry-picking a few.

Watching The Assassin Is Like Floating on a Gold-and-Lacquer Cloud
By Stephanie Zacharek
Wednesday, October 14, 2015 | 2 days ago


The Assassin Courtesy of Well Go USA

Hou Hsiao-hsien’s The Assassin is the Taiwanese director’s first foray into the martial-arts genre. It may also be his most resplendent film yet: Watching it is like floating along on a sumptuous gold-and-lacquer cloud. Hou favorite Shu Qi (who also starred in Millennium Mambo and Three Times) plays Nie Yinniang, a fierce fighter in 9th-century China who was kidnapped at the age of 10 and trained as an assassin by the scheming nun Jiaxin (Sheu Fang-yi). Don’t you just love it already? Hou starts off with a gorgeous prologue: He sets it off, like a gray jewel, by shooting it in austere, elegant black-and-white, in the (squarish) Academy ratio.

We see Yinniang expertly dispatch an enemy on horseback — the action is as swift and graceful as the snap of a silk flag in the wind. But when she fails to fulfill one of Jiaxin’s orders — she can’t bring herself to kill her next mark when she sees him with his young son — Jiaxin sends her away on an even more difficult mission. At this point Hou shifts to a palette of deep, rich, vibrant colors that mirror the subtle intensity of the action: Yinniang is forced to return to her home province, Weibo, which is embroiled in a struggle with the imperial court. She has orders to kill her cousin, Tian (Chang Chen), the governor of Weibo, though their family connection is even more complicated than it first appears.

[QUOTE]
Film Details
Critics’ Pick
The Assassin (Nie yinniang)
Rating:NR Genre:Action/Adventure Running Time:107 min.

I know some people who marched out of The Assassin fully confident they understood every angle of its somewhat labyrinthine plot, and others who lost the trail very early on. I’m somewhere in the middle, but I can assure you that you don’t need to be schooled in late–Tang dynasty lore to be dazzled. Hou has always been a gifted visual stylist, favoring languorous takes that beckon you closer rather than hold you at a distance. In The Assassin — shot by master cinematographer Mark Lee Ping Bin— there’s color everywhere: Princesses and concubines wear embroidered silk raiments in shades of pink and tangerine; rooms are dotted with bowls of peonies so bright they practically glow like lamps; gauzy patterned curtains let in just enough light, or provide subtle cover for cat-footed assassins.

The action is fleet and distinctive, quiet in a way that keeps you alert. Hou doesn’t have to beg for our attention; he favors naturalistic hand-to-hand combat, as opposed to the more fanciful traditional wuxia wirework. So even though this is a fantasy, the fighting feels disarmingly real: The characters bob and weave and dance, and you can hear and feel their feet hitting the ground. The Assassin explores the fringy divide between love and duty, and Shu carries its emotional weight deftly. Dressed all in black, she moves like a half-glimpsed shadow.

Hou uses very few close-ups here, preferring to tell his story mostly through movement: combat, dance, the act of passing through a landscape of satiny green firs or silvery birch trees and just watching. Shu conveys complicated feelings — longing, regret, anxiety — with little more than the tilt of her chin or the set of her shoulders. The Assassin is the slowest martial-arts movie in the East, and that’s a wonderful thing.

THE ASSASSIN | Directed by Hou Hsiao-hsien | Well Go USA | Laemmle’s Ahrya Fine Arts[/QUOTE]

‘The Assassin’ Review: Taiwan’s Oscar Entry Puts a Poetic Spin on the Action Genre
Movies | By Alonso Duralde on October 15, 2015 @ 4:02 pm Follow @aduralde

Legendary filmmaker Hou Hsiao-Hsien blends stunning imagery with intentionally enigmatic storytelling in this tale of vengeance

If video stores were still a thing in this day and age, you could imagine customers getting confused over “The Assassin” — after all, a Chinese-language film with that title and whose key art features a weapon-wielding woman immediately calls to mind a certain brand of action movie.

For master filmmaker Hou Hsiao-Hsien — who won Best Director at Cannes for the film that Taiwan is submitting as its Oscar entry this year — the tropes of the wuxia movie (the best known example of which in the U.S. is probably “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon”) are merely the underpinnings for a haunting, enigmatic story of deferred, conflicted vengeance, set in ninth-century China.

In the far-off province of Weibo, which threatens to break free of imperial rule, our heroine Nie Yinniang (Shu Qi, “The Transporter,” Hou’s “Millenium Mambo”) returns to her noble parents after years in training with her aunt, a nun-princess. (There’s a hyphenate you don’t see every day.) This relative has transformed the young woman into a peerless assassin, and wants her niece to kill Weibo’s governor Tian Ji’an (Chang Chen, “The Grandmaster,” “Crouching Tiger”).

Nie Yinniang and Tian Ji’an have a complicated backstory, however: the two were once betrothed, but his subsequent wedding to another woman prompted his jilted fiancée to became a mistress of the martial arts. Hesitant to take Tian Ji’an’s life herself, Nie Yinniang nonetheless aids and abets the personal and political turmoil around him, plaguing him in ways that are quietly subtle yet no less effective.

There are indeed a handful of combat scenes in “The Assassin,” and they are gorgeously, if pragmatically, mounted. You don’t get dizzying wire work or swooping camera shots, and the choreography is ruthlessly efficient, but these moments, rare as they are, nonetheless arrive charged with adrenaline.

Hou is more interested in creating a sense of visual poetry, the enigmatic kind that requires audiences to fill in certain narrative blank spaces. (I’ve seen the film more than once and am still a little unclear about who certain supporting characters are and what motivates them, not that it ultimately matters.) Working with his usual cinematographer Mark Lee Ping Bin (who also shot the rapturously gorgeous “In the Mood for Love” and “Norwegian Wood”), Hou creates indelible images, from a whispered conversation in a candle-lit bedroom where lacy curtains billow in and out of the frame to a cliffside perch surrounded by a mountain range that disappears into the clouds over the course of a scene.

This is the sort of filmmaking that demands actors who are as open and communicative with physical gesture as they are with their voices, and Hou’s ensemble is up to the challenge, from the leads down to supporting characters with absolutely no dialogue whatsoever. (That includes a master of dark magic who has the kind of floor-length eyebrows one seems to see only in Chinese-language cinema.)

The score by Giong Lim (“A Touch of Sin”) remains spare and period-sounding — except for one action scene in which it suddenly takes a turn into 1980s action-movie synth territory — and the spare, precise editing from Liao Ching-Sung and Huang Chih-Chia balances Hou’s long takes and the relatively fast-paced action moments with graceful skill.

Hou’s brand of reserve might not be for all audiences, but arthouse admirers of cinematic stillness will find themselves enraptured by this hypnotic tale.

And just to reiterate my review…

…here’s some non-rave reviews. I don’t agree with all their points. I think if you go into this film expecting an actioner, you will be sorely disappointed. But if you go in expecting an art film, you will be rewarded handsomely. And if you’re a true fan of the genre, you must see it - just to weigh in on the discussion here.

Film Review: The Assassin
A trained killer must choose between duty and honor in director Hou Hsiao-hsien’s first martial-arts movie.
By Daniel Eagan Oct 15, 2015

Taiwanese filmmaker Hou Hsiao-hsien won Best Director at Cannes for The Assassin, a lavishly appointed, glacially paced martial-arts movie about vendettas, betrayals and the rigors of Academy framing. Esteemed by critics, Hou’s movies are at their best an acquired taste. Years in the making, The Assassin is his first wuxia title—a genre that has become the last resort of art-house directors trying to connect to a broader audience.

Set during the decline of the Tang dynasty in the ninth century, The Assassin focuses on Nie Yinniang (Shu Qi), an efficient, highly trained killer first seen dispatching a presumably corrupt official on horseback. But Yinniang’s emotions get in the way during another assignment, when she spares her target after spotting his young son.

Jiaxin (Sheu Fang-yi), a sort of martial-arts nun and Yinniang’s handler, angrily sends her to the Weibo province to kill its governor, Tian Ji’an (Chang Chen)—Yinniang’s cousin and her former betrothed. Reacquainted with her father Nie Feng (Ni Dahong), Yinniang steals through Ji’an’s court, listening to his pronouncements and decrees, spying on his family and concubine Huji (Hsieh Hsin-ying), at times sparring anonymously with his guards.

Her emotions stirred by the sight of Ji’an with his young son, Yinniang is unable to bring herself to kill him. When Ji’an orders Nie to escort a disgraced official to the border, Yinniang secretly follows, saving them from an ambush by other assassins. Now Yinniang must answer to Jiaxin, who duels her former student for disobeying her.

The plot to The Assassin relies on wuxia staples, like secret assignations, fights in birch forests, or an intruder escaping guards by leaping onto a palace rooftop. Court intrigues, double-crossing minions, cryptic officials and bumbling peasants are as fundamental to the genre as the leads’ stylized combat poses and miraculous skill with weaponry. Hou buries his familiar plot under elliptical dialogue and narrative digressions.

To fans, story is less important than execution, which makes some of Hou’s choices here all the more puzzling. The opening scene unfolds in black-and-white and the old Academy 1.37 aspect ratio. Hou switches to color and a 1.85 frame for a musical number, then returns to 1.37 for the remainder of the film. As a result, most of cinematographer Mark Lee Ping Bing’s compositions are medium shots, with the action pulled back away from the camera.

In Hou’s hands, the Academy frame emphasizes costumes and sets instead of performances. For one scene, the camera lurks behind candles and a gauzy curtain. Pretty? Yes, but also absurdly indulgent.

It takes a certain kind of skill to turn Shu Qi, one of the warmest and most charming movie stars in Asia, into a stony cypher. (Bedecked in black like Zorro, she remains glamorous.) The other performers can’t break free from genre stereotypes. Villains hiss, leaders orate, teachers preach, Yinniang suffers silently.

Critics who wouldn’t be caught dead at a Yuen Woo Ping or Tsui Hark movie have been blustering about Hou’s idiosyncratic take on violence or his “startling bursts” of action. But the only thing startling about The Assassin’s action is how poorly executed it is. The fights fly by in a blur, choreographed less for impact than to cover the actors’ limited martial-arts abilities.

The Assassin does prove that if you slow it down enough, even kung fu can be boring.

‘The Assassin’ Misses Its Target
Added by Scott Stiffler on October 14, 2015.


Shu Qui, as Nie Yinniang, in a characteristically well-framed shot in Hou Hsiao-Hsien’s “The Assassin.” Courtesy Well Go USA Entertainment.

BY SEAN EGAN | “The Assassin,” Hou Hsiao-Hsien’s latest effort, which won him the Best Director Award at Cannes this year, is ostensibly a wuxia film (a popular martial arts subgenre).

Set during the Tang Dynasty, it tells the story of Nie Yinniang, a young women trained to be a deadly assassin, who returns home for the first time in years on orders to kill the man she’s betrothed to — now the leader of the most powerful military region in China. So far, so good.

After a legitimately stunning and exiting black-and-white prologue, the movie grinds to a halt. While “The Assassin” is by no means a bad movie — indeed, its formal merits are considerable — it’s certainly an incredibly frustrating one. The problem is that Hsiao-Hsien’s direction is completely at odds with the pulpy nature of the story he’s devised, and the genre that he’s chosen to work in — which may well be the point, but doesn’t provide for a particularly satisfying experience.

Everything is carefully measured to a fault. As his primary stylistic trick, Hsiao-Hsien chooses to champion silence and stillness over all else, to the point that it deflates any and all tension. Characters do not speak any more than is absolutely necessary, in order to further a plot that’s at once too thin and overly complicated.

The score (when present) is sparse, often just consisting of a drum keeping time like a metronome, further contributing to the sense that the movie is even longer than its actual runtime of 104 minutes. As do the establishing shots of the picturesque Chinese landscapes and architecture, which linger interminably, and sometimes have little or no connection to the scenes that follow (also bearing little connection to anything: the seemingly random aspect ratio shifts).

The cinematography of Mark Lee Ping Bing has been rightly lauded — every shot is immaculately framed, and, with its expressive use of color, any given moment of the film looks as though it could be a painting by a master, or a glossy photograph in a coffee-table book.

But therein lies the problem: it’s all too stationary, too inert. You might as well not even be watching a narrative feature in order to appreciate the gorgeous photography. Some may have the patience to simply sit around and appreciate the beauty; more will be bored by this surface-level beauty, untethered to any real emotion or story.

The few requisite fight scenes, which flare up to fulfill the minimum requirements for a wuxia film, are well choreographed, but also swift and abbreviated — not nearly enough of a payoff for the tedious feature-length buildup.

There’s a difference between subverting expectations and disregarding them completely. With “The Assassin,” Hsaiao-Hsien has decidedly done the latter. While intellectually the experiment is definitely interesting, it also makes for a maddeningly slow-paced film, less likely to inspire passion than induce sleep.

“The Assassin” is directed by Hou Hsiao-Hsien, and written by Hou Hsiao-Hsien, Chu Tien-wen, Hsieh Hai-Meng and Zhong Acheng. Opens Fri., Oct. 16 at the IFC Center (323 Sixth Ave., at Third St.). Visit ifccenter.com.

Well, I’m still intending to see this. Who knows? I may like it more than I expect to. I do like the old Shaw Brothers Chu Yuan/Chor Yuen-directed wuxia films, which almost never had any ‘great’ fights. Whether I can enjoy The Assassin as much as those old wuxias, I’ll only know as I’m watching it. Much of the appeal for me of Chu Yuan’s wuxias were the (usually predictable), almost Scooby-Doo-esque mysteries; the Shaw sets; the dreamlike quality of the films; and the performers themselves. With The Assassin it will be mainly to watch Shu Qi.

You should absolutely see this, Jimbo

Any fan of the martial arts genre should see this. It is an amazing film. It’s just not a great martial arts film. Just don’t go with that expectation and you’ll enjoy it. I was disappointed at the martial arts but knocked out by the film on the whole and I hope to see it again on the big screen. It’s that kind of gorgeous, well worth the price of admission.

And if it does secure an Oscar, our genre will change.

But I don’t think it will. Of course, we’ll see what the rest of the field looks like.

Here are some more rave reviews from noted newspapers - the Chicago Tribune and the Los Angeles Times:

Chicago Film Fest pick of the day: ‘The Assassin’

Michael Phillips
CHICAGO TRIBUNE

‘The Assassin’
10:00 pm, October 20, 2015
Is this the most contemplative martial arts movie ever made? It’s certainly the most rapturous, thanks to master filmmaker Hou Hsiao-Hsien, who won the directing prize at this year’s Cannes festival. In the 9thCentury Tang Dynasty, a stealthy killer for hire (Shu Qi) stalks her prey and wrestles with her conscience in silver birch forests and other wonders photographed in remote mainland China. The Tawainese filmmaker’s patient, unblinking camera eye may throw some martial-arts fans used to zooms, frantic editing and wilder technique in general. But this is an enveloping fantasy of another time, another place and stillness interrupted, periodically and violently, by some pretty cool moves. “In a discussion with my team of young fight choreographers,” Hou recently told NPR, “I made a rule never to leave the ground. You don’t want to be like Spider-Man swinging around.” And yet “The Assassin” floats like a butterfly.

6 p.m. Wednesday (repeats 8:15 p.m. Friday), AMC River East 21, 322 E. Illinois St. Tickets $11-$14 at chicagofilmfestival.com. Running time: 2:00.

-Michael Phillips

Hou Hsiao-Hsien’s ‘The Assassin’ gives martial arts an art-house punch


Chang Chen in director Hsiao-Hsien Hou’s movie, “The Assassin.”

BY DAVID NG
October 20, 2015, 4:50 p.m.

When Hou Hsiao-Hsien set out to make his first wuxia, or martial arts, movie, it was a virtual given that the acclaimed Taiwanese director adored by the festival circuit and art-house cinephiles around the world would create a fight picture unlike any other.

With his preference for long, trance-inducing takes and an indirect storytelling style, Hou undermines the genre’s high-adrenaline imperative to craft an action movie in his own distinct signature.

“The Assassin,” which is currently in limited release, contains fight scenes, to be sure, but the emphasis is squarely on the textural look and feel of a 9th century Tang Dynasty court.

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“Realism is very important to me,” said the director in a recent interview. “I see it as a realist movie that has fighting in it.”

Hou, 68, was making a rare stop in L.A. — his first in nearly three decades. He is currently riding a wave of acclaim for “The Assassin” that began at this year’s Cannes Film Festival, where he won the director award. Taiwan has submitted the film as its selection for the Academy Awards’ foreign film category.

“The Assassin” follows a young female killer (Shu Qi, in her third feature with the director), who returns to her home village to eliminate a local official (Chang Chen) to whom she was once betrothed.

Shot on locations in Taiwan, Japan, China and Inner Mongolia, the movie is the biggest of Hou’s career and took 1 1/2 years to shoot, on and off.

Hou said the most difficult sequence to film wasn’t any of the fight scenes but an extended conversation between Chang and a concubine that is intermittently obscured by a wafting, diaphanous silk curtain.

“This took the longest of them all,” he explained through an interpreter. “I shot it, but then I kept coming back to it to adjust the performances. The language they’re speaking is an old form of Mandarin, and it takes practice.” (The silk was imported from India.)

When it came time to shoot the fight scenes — which come in short, sudden bursts and are often over before you realize they’ve begun — Hou avoided imitating the balletic style of Hong Kong’s Shaw Brothers and King Hu. Instead, he took inspiration from the earthier Japanese samurai movies he loved as a kid going to the cinema.

“I did anything to get in. I begged people to sneak me in, or I would piece together torn tickets,” recalled the director, who grew up in the south of Taiwan.

Later, when he moved to Taipei, he encountered the Hong Kong-style wuxia pictures, but “the Japanese films were more formative for me. They’re more concrete. In China, wuxia is more like a dance.”

The protracted filming schedule gave rise to rumors in some cinematic circles that “The Assassin” was having money problems. Hou dismissed those whispers, saying that financing, which came from multiple countries, wasn’t a problem.

He said shooting dragged on “because we shot in far-away places and often high up in the mountains.”

For one visually arresting scene that comes late in the movie, Hou chose to shoot on the edge of a steep cliff in a wilderness section of central China’s Hubei province. As Shu’s assassin confronts her mentor, a dense fog gradually invades the frame until the characters are barely visible.

“It was very humid that day. It just happened that way,” recalled the director, adding that there are no digital effects in the scene. “I seriously contemplated another take without the clouds, so you could see the rock formations, which are quite striking. But I didn’t.”

The movie was shot on film by Hou’s longtime cinematographer Mark Lee Ping Bin. There was no discussion of shooting digitally, Lee said.

“There have been a lot of costume dramas on television and in movies of this time and place,” he said via email. The crew “didn’t want to be influenced by what’s been done and wanted to create a distinct look.”

Lee added: “I like paintings, particularly Chinese paintings of nature, so to be able to capture something like this on film means a lot to me.”

“The Assassin” is Hou’s first feature in nearly eight years; his last release was the French-language “Flight of the Red Balloon,” starring Juliette Binoche. In between, he devoted himself to leading film festivals in Taiwan.

“It was something that I took very seriously,” explained the director. He also runs a small chain of art-house cinemas in Taiwan, but he doesn’t consider himself to be a film buff.

“I don’t watch a lot of movies these days,” he said, adding that he recently managed to catch “The Grand Budapest Hotel.”

Hou was part of Taiwan’s new wave of filmmakers that came to international prominence in the '80s and early '90s, and included Edward Yang and Tsai Ming-Liang.

Their films embraced the daily realities of Taiwanese life, but Hou distinguished himself with his oblique storytelling methods and hypnotic camera work that eschews most Western idioms of cinema — there’s a near absence of close-ups in his films and an avoidance of the shot-reverse-shot vernacular of filming a conversation.

His 1998 film “The Flowers of Shanghai,” an ornately claustrophobic depiction of 19th century brothel life, vaulted him to the top ranks of international auteurs.

But it wasn’t until 2003 that he received commercial distribution in the U.S. with “Millennium Mambo,” his neon-and-techno Ecstasy trip through youth culture.

“The Assassin” takes his penchant for narrative indirection to new heights, especially in the second half when romantic entanglements and political alliances become increasingly difficult to parse. The movie even confounded some of the critics who raved about it at Cannes.

Part of that is his own fault, Hou admitted.

“The script was very complete and detailed, but what happens during editing is that if I don’t like something, I cut it out without regard to continuity,” he explained.

“That’s my problem. I have a way of making a movie like I’m making a music video — it’s abstract.”

He added: “There are clues in the movie, details that you can pick up. But it’s true, you need to see it more than once.”

david.ng@latimes.com

Made the cover of filmcomment

[URL=“http://www.filmcomment.com/issue/september-october-2015/”]Current Issue
September/October 2015

Hou Hsiao-hsiens The Assassin, Guy Maddins The Forbidden Room, Arnaud Desplechins My Golden Days, Michael Almereydas Experimenter, Denis Villeneuves Sicario, Douglas Fairbanks, Paul Schrader on widescreen, Jafar Panahis Taxi, the Nitrate Picture Show

If you’ve never read filmcomment, you can’t really call yourself a connoisseur of film. :wink:

Like I said: [QUOTE=GeneChing;1287595]From a film-making perspective, it’s just exquisite film-making, the kind that film students will gush over for years. [/QUOTE]

3 noms for APSA

This should do well at the various film awards. It’s that kind of gorgeous film.

The Assassin leads APSA nominees

By Kevin Ma

Fri, 30 October 2015, 13:35 PM (HKT)
Awards News

HOU Hsiao-hsien 's The Assassin has secured the most nominations at this year’s Asia Pacific Screen Awards (APSA).

The Taiwan wuxia drama is nominated for Best Feature Film, Achievement in Directing, and Achievement in Cinematography.

South Korea’s End of Winter and Alive each took two nominations. In addition to Best Feature Film for both films, Winter has nominations for Best Performance by an Actress (LEE Yeong-ran ) whilst Alive is nominated for Achievement in Directing.

Thailand’s Cemetery of Splendour is the only other film nominated for two awards: Best Feature Film and Achievement in Directing for Apichatpong “Joe” WEERASETHAKUL .

KUROSAWA Kiyoshi 's Journey to the Shore rounds out the Best Feature Film category.

In addition to Hou, Weerasethakul and Alive’s PARK Jung-bum , Stranger Zhat’s Ermek TURSUNOV and Under Electric Cloud’s Alexey German Jr. are also nominated for the Achievement in Directing award.

Turkey’s Motherland, Turkey’s Frenzy, China’s The Coffin in the Mountain , Kazakhstan’s Tent and Sri Lanka’s Dark in the White Light Sulanga gini aran are nominated for Best Screenplay.

The Find’s Aleksei Guskov, Right Now, Wrong Then 's JEONG Jae-yeong | , Downriver’s Reef Ireland, The President’s Misha Gomiashvili and Tharlo | 's Shide Nyima are nominated for Best Performance by an Actor.

An ‘s KIKI Kirin , Lorna’s Shamaine BUENCAMINO, Avalanche’s Fatemeh Motamed Arya and The Gulls’ Evgeniya Mandzhieva join Lee in the Best Performance by an Actress race.

As announced earlier, the awards will be decided by a jury led by South Korea’s KIM Dong-ho | . The winners will be announced in Brisbane on 26 Nov 2015