"Life is a series of incomplete perspectives, and perhaps that's what makes it so beautiful."
Edward Yang’s Yi Yi is not just a film—it’s a quiet, sprawling meditation on life, regret, and the fleeting nature of time. Told through the lens of a middle-class Taiwanese family, it gracefully weaves multiple perspectives: NJ, the father, caught between nostalgia and present responsibilities; Ting-Ting, the daughter, burdened by guilt and first love; and Yang-Yang, the young son, who innocently questions the limits of…