One by one viewing notes

Maurine 2022-04-19 09:02:39

Yangyang said: I can't

see what you see, you can't see what I see,

so how do I know what you see
Yangyang also said: I'm 8 years old and I think I'm getting old

Mother- in-law
Mr. Jane (NJ) 1, work
2, emotional encounter Lover
Mrs. Jane's
Daughter Tingting--Fat Man/Neighbor's Daughter/Neighbor's Mom/Teacher 's First Love
Son Yangyang 1, Photo
2, Big Girl Concerned, Breaking His Life
Uncle 1, Emotional Wife/Old Lover/Son
2, Investment Failure - Going Shit Yun
's whole family is in a state of anxiety. The collapse of her mother-in-law makes the whole family into an imbalance
. The life of several generations of a middle-class family in Taipei is originally presented on the screen. I
see
the wedding at the beginning of other people's life, the beginning of a new life, funerals, and life.

The clip at the end of watching the movie,
Yang Dechang, is indeed a master of Taiwanese film, and I can't see such a refreshing movie in Taiwan now.
Cai Mingliang is immersed in his own slow world and cannot extricate himself from it. Others have even given up filming, and Hou Hsiao-Hsien is still insisting on paying tribute to Otsu.
I haven't heard the news of Yang Dechang for a long time, but I feel that this film is much calmer than his murder.
It's just an undercurrent, and living in this self-reliance is more detached and difficult.

View more about Yi Yi: A One and a Two... reviews

Extended Reading
  • Darron 2022-01-12 08:01:56

    The development of Yang Dechang's movie plot is really slow

  • Kaylah 2022-03-18 09:01:05

    We have not yet been able to understand the propositions of life, but the world treats us as old.

Yi Yi: A One and a Two... quotes

  • Ota: Why are we afraid of the first time? Every day in life is a first time. Every morning is new. We never live the same day twice. We're never afraid of getting up every morning. Why?

  • Yang-Yang: I'm sorry, Grandma. It wasn't that I didn't want to talk to you. I think all the stuff I could tell you... You must already know. Otherwise, you wouldn't always tell me to 'Listen!' They all say you've gone away. But you didn't tell me where you went. I guess it's someplace you think I should know. But, Grandma, I know so little. Do you know what I want to do when I grow up? I want to tell people things they don't know. Show them stuff they haven't seen. It'll be so much fun. Perhaps one day... I'll find out where you've gone. If I do, can I tell everyone, and bring them to visit you? Grandma, I miss you. Especially when I see my newborn cousin who still doesn't have a name. He reminds me that you always said you felt old. I want to tell him that I feel I am old, too.