With an international premier at the Osaka Asian Film Festival 2024, Yi-tzu Lan's ‘The Horse' brings us an, at first glance, a strange story featuring a horse appearing out of nowhere.
The Horse is screening at Osaka Asian Film Festival
Jing, standing on the threshold of a room with a moving box in her hands, can't bring herself to enter. Instead, she starts packing up in the other rooms. However, the situation is overwhelming her and her attempts at starting the work lead her back to the door of the room. Memories linked to objects in that room keep her from moving on. But then, out of nowhere, a horse appears in the apartment and its behavior forces Jing to get her act together.
Strange as it may seem at first, the concept of ‘The Horse' is very recognizable. Moving house can already be an overwhelming undertaking in itself: struggling to put boxes together,...
The Horse is screening at Osaka Asian Film Festival
Jing, standing on the threshold of a room with a moving box in her hands, can't bring herself to enter. Instead, she starts packing up in the other rooms. However, the situation is overwhelming her and her attempts at starting the work lead her back to the door of the room. Memories linked to objects in that room keep her from moving on. But then, out of nowhere, a horse appears in the apartment and its behavior forces Jing to get her act together.
Strange as it may seem at first, the concept of ‘The Horse' is very recognizable. Moving house can already be an overwhelming undertaking in itself: struggling to put boxes together,...
- 3/3/2024
- by Nancy Fornoville
- AsianMoviePulse
Taiwan International Co-Funding Program (Ticp) from Taiwan Creative Content Agency (Taicca) continues to make an impact at the 74th Berlinale. Black Tea and Shambhala enter the main competition, while Sleep With Your Eyes Open competes at Encounters. Festival veteran Tsai Ming-Liang scored two official selections with his latest documentary Abiding Nowhere in Berlinale Special and The Wayward Cloud at Berlinale Classics Special.
Black Tea is Abderrahmane Sissako's follow up feature after Timbuktu with Taiwan as a key location and two Taiwanese actors Chang Han from A Brighter Summer Day and Wu Ke-Xi of Nina Wu playing alongside Nina Mélo in this cross-cultural romance. The film also received investment from Kaohsiung Film Fund.
Also in the main competition is Shambhala, the second feature from Nepal's Min Bahadur Bham, which sees a woman journey across the Himalayas to prove her innocence. Liao Ching-Sung and Roger Huang are two executive producers from...
Black Tea is Abderrahmane Sissako's follow up feature after Timbuktu with Taiwan as a key location and two Taiwanese actors Chang Han from A Brighter Summer Day and Wu Ke-Xi of Nina Wu playing alongside Nina Mélo in this cross-cultural romance. The film also received investment from Kaohsiung Film Fund.
Also in the main competition is Shambhala, the second feature from Nepal's Min Bahadur Bham, which sees a woman journey across the Himalayas to prove her innocence. Liao Ching-Sung and Roger Huang are two executive producers from...
- 2/16/2024
- by Adam Symchuk
- AsianMoviePulse
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