The Essentials: Yi Yi (2000)
Each member of a middle-class Taipei family seeks to reconcile past and present relationships within their daily lives. (NR, 173 min.)
Showtimes
Sunday, March 5, 2023
6:00 PM
Monday, March 6, 2023
7:00 PM
Each member of a middle-class Taipei family seeks to reconcile past and present relationships within their daily lives. (NR, 173 min.)
6:00 PM
7:00 PM
The Essentials: Contemporary Asian Cinema
Free for Members
The extraordinary, internationally embraced Yi Yi (A One and a Two . . .), directed by the late Taiwanese master Edward Yang, follows a middle-class family in Taipei over the course of one year, beginning with a wedding and ending with a funeral. Whether chronicling middle-age father NJ’s tentative flirtations with an old flame or precocious young son Yang-Yang’s attempts at capturing reality with his beloved camera, the filmmaker deftly imbues every gorgeous frame with a compassionate clarity. Warm, sprawling, and dazzling, this intimate epic is one of the undisputed masterworks of the new century. [Criterion]
Starring: Nien-Jen Wu, Elaine Jin, Issei Ogata
Director: Edward Yang
Languages: Japan, Taiwan
Genre(s): Drama, Romance, Music
"Generous, soulful film."
— Manohla Dargis, L.A. Weekly
"A marvel of delicacy and humor."
— Peter Travers, Rolling Stone
"Great, bittersweet family drama."
— Michael Wilmington, Chicago Tribune
"Chances are, you'll watch most of it with a smile on your face, and you'll miss these characters when it's over."
— Eric Harrison, Houston Chronicle
"Yang favors a gentle and introspective style that shows how deep and strong everyday emotions can run. A memorable treat."
— David Sterritt, Christian Science Monitor
"In its low-key way, Yi Yi presents an intelligent, profound and at times heartrending slice of Taiwanese middle-class existence."
— Jonathan Foreman, New York Post
"The one movie so far this year that every filmgoer should see, if only to get a big dose of what we've been missing from Hollywood."
— Michael Atkinson, Mr. Showbiz
"An amazing experience: as if a TV soap opera, packed with the usual catastrophes, were done with unaccustomed depth and real storytelling genius."
— Michael Wilmington Chicago Tribune
"One of the year's best: a rich, funny, enormously humane portrait of a middle-class Taipei family in the throes of romantic, economic and spiritual upheaval. [2000]"
— David Ansen, Newsweek
"Wise, delicate and impeccably performed, Yi Yi is a three- hour drama that looks at one middle-class family in transition -- and does so with such a kind and probing eye that we all see our lives reflected through Yang's lens."
— Edward Guthmann, San Francisco Chronicle
"It's a magical film -- an exquisitely made and exceedingly wise family drama that communicates a touching sense of the universality of the human condition, and leaves us with the rich emotional satisfaction we just don't seem to get often at the movies anymore."
— William Arnold, Seattle Post-Intelligencer
"A humanistic masterwork. The film’s brilliance emanates equally from its structure (the story is delicately bookended by two cultural rituals: a wedding and a funeral), the acuteness of its gaze, and Yang’s acknowledgement of life as a series of alternately humdrum and catastrophic occurrences, like a flower that blooms in the summer and wilts in the fall; he hopes you will notice it, because seeing is what validates its unique extraordinariness."
— Ed Gonzalez, Slant Magazine