Edward Yang(1947-2007)
- Writer
- Director
- Actor
Born on November 6, 1947 in Shanghai, China, Edward Yang has become one
of the most talented international filmmakers of his generation. Along
with Hou Hsiao-Hsien and Tsai Ming-Liang, Yang ranks among the leading
artists of the Taiwanese New Wave, and one of the world's most
brilliant auteurs. Growing up in Taipei, Taiwan, he was very interested
in Japanese Manga/Comic Books, which led to the writing of his own
screenplays. After studying engineering in Taiwan, he enrolled in the
Electrical Engineering program at The University of Florida, receiving
his Masters degree in 1974 while doing work with The Center for
Informatics Research. Yang did not pursue a PhD and instead attended
USC Film School briefly, but dropped out after feeling disenchanted by
the program's commerce-and-business focus and his own misgivings of
pursuing a Film Career. Upon working in Seattle with microcomputers and
Defense software, an encounter with a piece by Werner Herzog (Aguirre,
Wrath of God) gave him inspiration to observe classics in world cinema
and reignited his interest in Film. He eventually wrote the script and
served as a production aide on the Hong Kong TV movie, The Winter of
1905 (1981). Although he returned to Taiwan to direct a number of
television shows, his break came in 1982 with the direction and writing
of the film short, Desires (1982), in the seminal Taiwanese New Wave
collaboration In Our Time(1982). While Hou Hsiao-Hsien's movies dealt
primarily with history or Taiwan's countryside, Yang created films
analyzing and revealing the many themes of city and urban life. His
first major piece was That Day On The Beach (1983), a modernist
narrative reflecting on couples and family. He followed with the urban
films Taipei Story (1984), a reflection on urban-Taiwan through a
couple - where he cast fellow auteur Hou Hsiao Hsien as the lead - and
The Terrorizer (1986), a complex multi-narrative tale. In Yang's
brilliant A Brighter Summer Day (1991), a sprawling examination of teen
gangs, societal clashes, the influence of American pop-culture and
youth, his first authentic masterpiece was crafted. He has followed
with the satires A Confucian Confusion (1995), and Mahjong (1996),
films that looked at the struggle between the modern and the
traditional, the relationship between business and art, and how
capitalistic greed may corrupt, influence, or effect art. It is,
however, his most recent film, Yi Yi (2000), that is considered his
magnum opus, an epic story about the Jian family seen through their
different perspectives. The three-hour masterwork begins with a
wedding, ends with a funeral, and examines all areas of human life in a
variety of interesting, artistic ways. He has also collaborated with
fellow auteur, novelist, and screenwriter Nien-Jen Wu on the piece,
casting him as one of the leads, NJ. Yang's filmmaking style looks at
the uncertain future of modernizing Taiwan in an enlightening manner,
and his vision is one of the most original operating in world cinema
today.