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Saturday, October 04, 2025

The Films of Hou Hsiao-hsien

Notes on all 18 Features of Hou Hsiao-hsien and a Top 10 list:

Cute Girl (1980)

Cheerful Wind (1981)

The Green, Green Grass of Home (1982)

The Boys from Fengkuei (1983)

A Summer at Grandpa's (1984)

A Time to Live, A Time to Die (1985)

Dust in the Wind (1986)

Daughter of the Nile (1987)

A City of Sadness (1989)

The Puppetmaster (1993)

Good Men, Good Women (1995)

Goodbye South, Goodbye (1996)

Flowers of Shanghai (1998)

Millennium Mambo (2001)

Café Lumière (2003)

Three Times (2005)

Flight of the Red Balloon (2008)

The Assassin (2015)

This spotlight started with the Early films of Hou Hsiao-hsien(HHH) and then was completed by viewing the half-dozen missing films from his output. A few patterns emerged and I am going to arrange his films in the following phases.

HHH 1.0: light-hearted romantic films

The first three films of Hou Hsiao-hsien films fall in this category: Cute Girl (1980), Cheerful Wind (1981), The Green, Green Grass of Home (1982).

The Boys from Fengkuei (1983) stands apart from these three and can be considered HHH 1.5.

HHH 2.0: autobiographical, memories, coming-of-age

The three films in this phase are: A Summer at Grandpa's (1984), A Time to Live, A Time to Die (1985), Dust in the Wind (1986).

Two of the three films are part of Hou’s Coming-of-age trilogy: A Summer at Grandpa's (1984), A Time to Live, A Time to Die (1985), Daughter of the Nile (1987).

The style we associate with Hou Hsiao-hsien are present in these films: long takes, static camera, realistic settings. There are sprinkles of Ozu flourishes in Dust in the Wind, which features images of the village, sky and landscape.

A Summer at Grandpa's, A Time to Live, A Time to Die and Dust in the Wind have such a lived-in feel that they don’t feel like scripted cinema. The realism of the settings, the character’s behaviours are so well outlined that it feels like we watching a camera capture everyday occurrences of the town folk. In addition, Dust in the Wind nicely sets up the urban lifestyle challenges in the next phase.

HHH 2.5: contemporary / urban portrayals

The contemporary / urban portrayal can be its own phase, but I am putting it at 2.5 because stylistically it is an extension of the 2.0 coming-of-age phase except the main characters are in the next age category (young adults in early 20s) compared to the teenagers from the 2.0 phase.

The first film in this phase is Daughter of the Nile (1987) with the next few films separated by decades: Goodbye South, Goodbye (1996), Millennium Mambo (2001) plus the third segment of Three Times.

Daughter of the Nile is closely aligned with Millennium Mambo in showing the isolated alienated life of a young woman in a city. Daughter of the Nile is the first pure city set film of Hou’s career.

Goodbye South, Goodbye is the first film dealing with crime and gangsters even though earlier Hou films featured those elements on the fringes. The film is also a contemporary look at youth in Taiwan, something explored in Daughter of Nile and subsequently in Millennium Mambo.

The final segment of Three Times (2005, A Time For Youth) forms a connective thread along with Millennium Mambo in depicting the isolation and alienation of characters in urban centers.

HHH 3.0: political topics are background, remembrance of a time past

The political past serves as fodder for A City of Sadness (1989), The Puppetmaster (1993), half of Good Men, Good Women (1995) and also for two segments of Three Times (2005). In addition, A City of Sadness, The Puppetmaster form Hou’s Taiwan trilogy along with Dust in the Wind.

It is in this phase that HHH got plenty of universal acclaim and it is easy to see why. A City of Sadness and The Puppetmaster are two of his strongest films that intelligently use historical aspects to craft personal tales of everyday people.

HHH 4.0: films set outside of Taiwan

The films in this phase are Flowers of Shanghai (1998), Café Lumière (2003), Flight of the Red Balloon (2008), The Assassin (2015).

Flowers of Shanghai and The Assassin are set in earlier periods of China, which sets them apart from his other Taiwan based films. Café Lumière is set in Japan (primarily Tokyo) and is HHH’s tribute to Ozu while Flight of the Red Balloon is set in Paris and uses the 1956 French film The Red Balloon as a reference point.

Top 10 HHH films

With the exception Hou Hsiao-hsien’s first 3 features (the trio of romantic comedies), his remaining films are all excellent. It is tough to leave out many films from this 10.

1. Flowers of Shanghai (1998)

This stunning visual feast is the high-point of Hou Hsiao-hsien’s cinematic style! The story centers around brothels in 1880’s China where games are played and the losers have to drink up. Food is served and then someone leaves with a girl of their choice. Problems arise when love comes into the equation. A man wants to buy a woman’s freedom but that does not go as per plan. Jealousy and doubts set in, and in the end, heartbreak follows.

2. Three Times (2005)

This film is the perfect encapsulation of Hou Hsiao-hsien’s filmography as it deals with the director’s past and contemporary themes, as indicated by the title. The titles of the segments are a nod towards the director’s previous film A Time to Live and a Time to Die. In Three Times, the three segments are called “A Time for Love” (1966 love story), “A Time for Freedom (1911 segment nod towards his The Flower of Shanghai) while “A Time for Youth” is an extension of the urban characters Hou covered later in his career.

Each segment has a different colour palette with the first 1966 segment in simple colours (not too bright), the middle 1911 segment in bright colours while the final 2005 segment as grayish tones. One connecting element of the three stories in Three Times is the usage of text messages as a form of communication. All the characters use one form of the written word to express their feelings, be it via letters, scrolls or SMS text messages. The audience is brought in the loop as we get to read the messages itself in the 1911 via title cards.

3. A City of Sadness (1989)

An emotional powerful film that highlights the period of “White Terror” in late 1940s Taiwan (1945-49) by depicting the plight of the Lin family. This film marked a departure from Hou’s previous coming-of-age / rural portrayals by directly depicting the impact of political changes on Taiwanese lives.

4. The Puppetmaster (1993)

This is the second in Hou’s political films after A City of Sadness but the time period is earlier than A City of Sadness. The Puppetmaster covers the time period from 1909 to 1945 and depicts Taiwanese life under Japanese occupation. Based on the memoirs of Li Tian-lu, a real-life Taiwanese puppeteer, the film creatively depicts puppet performances spliced with snippets of Li Tian-lu’s life. As a result, the puppet performances fill a narrative gap by showing key historical events and also highlighting the Japanese propaganda that the puppet plays were meant to depict.

5. Dust in the Wind (1985)

An emotional yet beautiful love story that straddles the rural-urban divide that Hou Hsiao-hsien covered in his films. In that regard, this film is the precursor to the alienated urban life portrayed in HHH’s 2.5 phase.

6. The Assassin (2015)

The Assassin shows that in the hands of an auteur a wuxia genre can be transformed into a work of breath-taking art. Hou Hsiao-Hsien references his earlier films but also dives into a political landscape with a razor-sharp eye for detail.

7. The Boys from Fengkuei (1983)

The Boys from Fengkuei observes the characters in their moments of mischief, fights, joy, sadness without adding any emotional musical cues. The film even features a motorcycle tracking shot, a sequence found in many subsequent Hou Hsiao-hsien films especially Goodbye South, Goodbye.

8. Goodbye South, Goodbye (1996)

Gangsters go through their complicated lives trying to etch out a better deal and a better future for themselves. At times the movie has shades of Hong Kong gangster/Japanese Yakuza movies but this one stands completely on its own. The film gives a glimpse into the lowest rungs of gangster business, a tier where negotiations are made over the kind of chickens to be traded, gambling rackets, family inheritances and other back-room deals. The camera just waits patiently and allows us to observe what the characters will do next, how they will react and how they will cope.

9. Millennium Mambo (2001)

With Millennium Mambo, Hou changes gears completely and portrays the club hopping life of Taiwanese youth. The film is basked in cool bluish visuals mixed with some bright neon lights as the main character Vicky (Shu Qi) alternates from clubs and bars while her boyfriend gets into fights. Shu Qi carries this film on her shoulders and the camera leisurely hovers over her as she changes clothes, walks around half-naked, makes love, gets into fights with her boyfriend and attempts to run away from him.

10. Café Lumière (2003)

The movie is HHH’s tribute to Ozu’s Tokyo and I hadn’t appreciated this movie when I first saw it because I hadn’t seen too many Ozu films. Café Lumière is a lovingly nod towards Ozu but also shows the tender restraint in Hou’s style. This film is a rarity now because it shows us a Tokyo that isn’t overrun with tourists like our current times. In a way, this film is a memory of the charm and beauty one could find in Tokyo decades ago.

Other Reading:

1. David Bordwell on Early Hou films.

2. Yvonne Ng on The Puppetmaster (note: this downloads a pdf).

3. Kent Jones on HHH in Film Comment.

4. J. Hoberman on The Puppetmaster.

5. Jonathan Rosenbaum on HHH.

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