• GNCR Award  
  • International Competition

NO FORM

Tsai MING-LIANG

Initially Tsaï Ming-liang had planned to make a period feature film which,
inspired from an ancient writing, would have recounted a 6th century
Chinese Buddhist monk’s journey West, in this case to India. Then the project
gradually changed into a series of fragments – No Form is the first, and
Walker the second one to have been shot so far. They are due to be put
together as an installation later on. Lee Kang-sheng, as the long-time
accomplice, actor, and doppelganger of the director like Doinel for Truffaut,
wears the scarlet red outfit of the monk. He moves through a dual space: in
the midst of a crowd in Taiwan, as an anonymous individual amongst others,
walking in slow motion; as well as in the abstract maze of an all-white space,
on the way to his image.
Although this film is reminiscent of the spiritual quest in A Conversation with
God (FID 2002), where the triviality of the urban environment still guaranteed
the presence of a god for each and everyone, No Form focuses on the slow
journey of this pilgrim monk toward a new, rejuvenated and perhaps
redeemed form. Undoubtedly related to the artist, the film does not keep
this unhurried Buddhist from a finale both wonderful and funny. (JPR)

  • GNCR Award  
  • International Competition

Technical sheet

TAÏWAN
2012
Couleur
HD
20’

Version originale
Sans dialogue
Image
Laio Pen-Jung, Gaffer Li Ling-Yu
Son
Chu Shih
Montage
Cei Chen-Ching
Avec
Lee Kang-Sheng

Production et distribution
Homegreen Films

Filmographie
– FACE, 2009
– I DON’T WANT TO SLEEP ALONE, 2006
– THE WAYWARD CLOUD, 2005
– GOODBYE, DRAGON INN, 2003
– THE SKYWALK IS GONE, 2002
– WHATT TIME IS IT THERE?, 2001
– THE HOLE, 1998