In Our Time directed by Edward Yang, Chang Yi, Ko I-Chen, and Tao Te-chen - 9/10
This is the groundbreaking film that changed the landscape of Taiwanese cinema. It is a portmanteau film (basically an anthology film) with four short films by four directors. Each film is set in a different decade (50's, 60's, 70's, and 80's) and also features main characters of different ages (children, teenagers, young adults, and married adults). The first short film is one of my favorite short films ever. It's simply a child's love story but its done so well and it has a great musical quality to it. Its essentially a very good family drama that includes a nice love story to it, I really like the children actors and how well the children characters are written. The second film, by master director Edward Yang is the best though. It is about a girl going through puberty, I felt a lot of emotional pain watching the film as I related very much with the character. It is a very sad story of disillusionment and the pains of growing up. I already see signs of mastery there in the way that Yang uses classical music (and rock music) instead of dialogue to communicate a lot of the emotions. The third film is by far the weakest (and pretty much is what brings the score down to a 9 for me), it is an energetic story set during a young man's college days. I didn't get the story very much, nor was I very interested in the characters (unlike in the other stories) but I did enjoy the ending scene very much for its energy. It was horrible having this short follow Yang's masterpiece, but I think anyone would have a difficult time following a Yang film under any circumstance. The final short film is very good (although not quite as good as the first two), it is a comedy starring the wonderful Sylvia Chang. I love the beginning of the film, it reminds me of the marriage movies I've been studying, but then it just goes into absurd comedy mode which is also awesome. The film feels a lot like the silent comedies I love to watch, and it's very fun. I felt like it could've done a bit more but it was a very fun film. Overall, the film is a masterpiece, but just as most anthology films, it is a bit uneven with the third short not matching up. Also, the order is kind of thematically out of order in a way. Then again, I don't even know what's the best order since the films do go chronologically. I just feel like Yang's film would have made for the most powerful ending. Any fan of Taiwanese cinema should watch this, and hell any fan of good cinema should watch this as it is the birth of one of the greatest movements in contemporary (80's - present) cinema. I wish that my country (the Dominican Republic) and all nations without a powerful cinema take note of how the Taiwanese consciously revolutionized their cinema.
Flunky, Work Hard! directed by Mikio Naruse - 8/10
Naruse's earliest surviving film is an interesting work as it mixes light comedy with heavy drama. It also adds some experimental editing and visual techniques that are not seen very often in Naruse's 30's films (at least from the 10 I've seen so far). The film is very good but I wouldn't place it as a masterpiece or as a near-masterpiece as it isn't something I'd be willing to watch again many times, although I will definitely give it another watch much later on.
Charade directed by Stanley Donen - 9/10
Okay, it took me forever to finally watch this film but I'm glad I finally did! I love this movie so much, it is just so full of suspense and twists that make it such an enjoyable watch. I'll admit that for the first hour or so I was a little disappointed and I was going to give it a weaker 8/10, but then as the plot unfolds and the story gets crazier I fell in love with the movie more and more. The film was engaging from beginning to end, and even though it isn't one of the greatest masterpieces, it is just extremely entertaining and it demonstrates great directing. This is one of those films like The Heroic Trio where I can see that it is not perfect, but I do not even care since it just made me feel so good. That being said, it is a very well-made film and it is definitely no guilty pleasure, and yes it is even better than some of Hitchcock's films (give me this over To Catch A Thief any day, although that film has better visuals).