As a thriller/horror film set in Taipei, Double Vision (
It is probably the first Taiwanese film to look at this often-gray city with a wild sense of imagination. Secondly, the plot centers around a mysterious sect of Taoism that operates using hallucination and serial murder. It's a great reflection of this modern yet superstition-laden city.
For Taiwanese filmmaking, Chen Kuo-fu's fifth film is heartening.
As a slasher flick, it provides non-stop horrors guaranteed to give audiences the creeps. The corpse of a baby floats in a glass container filled with formalin (this baby has two pupils in each eye). One character has his heart removed while still alive, and another gets his tongue ripped out. And as an added bonus, Chen throws in plenty of interesting information about Taoist ritual and biotech. Chen describes his production as "a film with a typical Hollywood structure but with Taiwanese content."
Huang Hou-tu (Tony Leung Kar-fai) is a glum police officer who has been relegated to a do-nothing job in the foreign affairs police after having caught his colleague in a corruption scandal. His daughter was later kidnapped by the convicted colleague and in the course of the abduction she was injured and has since suffered from trauma. Huang has been guilt-ridden ever since.
During a hot summer, three murders have taken place within a week. The head of a chemical industry group is found dead in his office. His body is cold as if he had been drowned in ice water, though he apparently never left his office. A legislator's mistress, who had been involved in several corruption scandals, is found murdered in her apartment. Her body has been burnt, though there is no sign of fire in her house. A few days later an American priest named Lorenzo, who was reportedly involved in arms deals between the US and Taiwan, is found dead in his church. He had been disemboweled and his intestines were washed and put back into his body.
The three were unacquainted, but the coroner discovers a mysterious black fungus in their brains, along with evidence that they had all died in a hallucinatory state.
Because of the mysterious nature of the murders and the confidential background of Lorenzo, the Americans send FBI agent Kevin Richter (David Morse) to help investigate. He teams up with the morose foreign affairs police detective Huang. The investigation runs into trouble straight away. First it is the cultural difference between the officers, then opposition from the Taiwanese vice squad who are worried that Richter will take all the credit.
As Richter and Huang dig deeper, they discover the murders have been carried out by hi-tech experts turned religious fanatics who have built a temple complex within their modern skyscraper.
Richter and Huang had no idea what they were getting into.
Being a film financed and co-produced by Hong Kong-based Columbia Pictures Film Production Asia, with a budget of reportedly US$60m, Double Vision indeed evinces Hollywood production values.
The cinematography provides a very real, and very detailed picture of the city and people, giving the story a cruel and surreal atmosphere. The special effects throughout the film are top-notch. Director Chen Kuo-fu, better known for his witty sarcasm and laments over the state of urban human relationships seems to have changed his style entirely.
Despite its visual quality, the film has some major flaws, notably its heavy-handedness. On the one hand it tries to explain a mystery, while on the other it deals with protagonist Huang's inner fears and depression. It also wants to depict cultural differences between the two investigators. Unfortunately, these elements fail to connect. The film spends too much time indulging in Taoist fantasy and making the hi-tech crimes look complicated rather than telling its story. On the other hand, the film manages to strike a good balance between introducing Chinese culture to the West without over-simplifying the mystery.
This is achieved at the expense of Richter and Huang's character development.
The audience will find it difficult to identify or emotionally connect with the hero played by Tony Leung. His guilt over the past accident and the failure of his marriage don't quite explain his later suffering. Director Chen said he intended to show more humanity in the story, but in this he fails to be convincing.
In its own way, Double Vision gives enough shocks and mystery, but it ultimately fails to be a totally satisfying movie.
The slashing of the government’s proposed budget by the two China-aligned parties in the legislature, the Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) and Taiwan People’s Party (TPP), has apparently resulted in blowback from the US. On the recent junket to US President Donald Trump’s inauguration, KMT legislators reported that they were confronted by US officials and congressmen angered at the cuts to the defense budget. The United Daily News (UDN), the longtime KMT party paper, now KMT-aligned media, responded to US anger by blaming the foreign media. Its regular column, the Cold Eye Collection (冷眼集), attacked the international media last month in
On a misty evening in August 1990, two men hiking on the moors surrounding Calvine, a pretty hamlet in Perth and Kinross, claimed to have seen a giant diamond-shaped aircraft flying above them. It apparently had no clear means of propulsion and left no smoke plume; it was silent and static, as if frozen in time. Terrified, they hit the ground and scrambled for cover behind a tree. Then a Harrier fighter jet roared into view, circling the diamond as if sizing it up for a scuffle. One of the men snapped a series of photographs just before the bizarre
Feb. 10 to Feb. 16 More than three decades after penning the iconic High Green Mountains (高山青), a frail Teng Yu-ping (鄧禹平) finally visited the verdant peaks and blue streams of Alishan described in the lyrics. Often mistaken as an indigenous folk song, it was actually created in 1949 by Chinese filmmakers while shooting a scene for the movie Happenings in Alishan (阿里山風雲) in Taipei’s Beitou District (北投), recounts director Chang Ying (張英) in the 1999 book, Chang Ying’s Contributions to Taiwanese Cinema and Theater (打鑼三響包得行: 張英對台灣影劇的貢獻). The team was meant to return to China after filming, but
Power struggles are never pretty. Fortunately, Taiwan is a democracy so there is no blood in the streets, but there are volunteers collecting signatures to recall nearly half of the legislature. With the exceptions of the “September Strife” in 2013 and the Sunflower movement occupation of the Legislative Yuan and the aftermath in 2014, for 16 years the legislative and executive branches of government were relatively at peace because the ruling party also controlled the legislature. Now they are at war. The Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) holds the presidency and the Executive Yuan and the pan-blue coalition led by the