A staggering work of art which features a rich panoply of themes related to cultural identity and community. Novelistic in the vast network of characters and relationships it traverses, A Brighter Summer Day is richly textured, allegorical examination of the people of Taiwan, told through the displaced and fractured nodes of a community which lacks common, collective identity. Through the lens of impressionable youth, emotionality is juxtaposed with rationality, the former intrinsically synthesizing with alienation and despondence, inevitably breeding aggression and violence due to an environment which provides little stability or recourse. Parents pine for their past lives on the mainland while the youth grow alienated by their parents diaspora. Lacking direction they cling to facile notions of community such as street gangs and school politics, similarly to their adult counterparts who themselves now cling to their foregone past. Adrift and isolated, the youth in many ways symbolize Taiwan, shaped by a litany of culture influences yet lacking any identity themselves. This environment breeds a dangerous naivety about consequences and the lack of balance necessary between egoism and altruism, emotionality and rationality, which inevitably ends in one of the most staggering moments of tragedy in the history of cinema.. Grand in scope, A Brighter Summer Day's examination of cultural identity and diaspora through the impressionable, innocent lens of youth is universal theme and yet A Brighter Summer Day is also very specific to a certain space and time in Taiwanese history, empathetic in its investigation of aggression and profuse in providing opportunities for appreciation, analysis, and introspection.
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AuthorLove of all things cinema brought me here. Archives
June 2023
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