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Yi Yi [VHS]
 
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Yi Yi [VHS] (2000)

Nien-Jen Wu , Elaine Jin , Edward Yang  |  NR |  VHS Tape
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (65 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Actors: Nien-Jen Wu, Elaine Jin, Issei Ogata, Kelly Lee, Jonathan Chang
  • Directors: Edward Yang
  • Writers: Edward Yang
  • Producers: Michiyo Satô, Naoko Tsukeda, Osamu Kunota, Shin'ya Kawai, Wei-yen Yu
  • Format: Color, Subtitled, NTSC
  • Language: English, Japanese
  • Subtitles: English
  • Rated: NR (Not Rated)
  • Number of tapes: 2
  • Studio: Fox Lorber
  • VHS Release Date: February 19, 2002
  • Run Time: 173 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (65 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B00005AABE
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #413,755 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

A wedding and a grandmother's illness reveal fault lines in the lives of one Taipei family in Edward Yang's extraordinary film. Yi Yi is built from deceptively simple elements that together create a complex, warm, and utterly convincing portrait of family life. NJ Jian is a businessman facing bankruptcy, but he has to juggle his financial problems with family strife when his mother-in-law falls into a coma. NJ's wife, Min-Min, brings her mother home, and each family member--including daughter Ting-Ting and her delightful little brother Yang-Yang--spends hours talking to the old lady. These conversations become confessionals and the characters gradually re-evaluate their relationships. There are no catastrophic conflicts, only the ordinary, sometimes troubled, unfolding of lives. Yang enhances the film's sense of reality by frequently holding the camera back from the action. The use of long shots and unexpected angles makes it seem like the audience is eavesdropping, catching glimpses of lives passing by. Yi Yi is almost three hours long, but it flies by. Yang is both a consummate, restrained technician and a subtle director of actors. The combination is a magical one. --Simon Leake

Product Description

Edward Yang's award-winning masterpiece follows the lives of NJ Nian, his wife, Min-Min and their 2 children who share their Taipei apartment with Min-Min's elderly mother. Now in his mid-40's NJ is a partner in a computer hardware firm which made big profits last year but which will soon go bankrupt if it doesn't change direction. Things start to go wrong for the Jians on the day that Min-Min's brother A-Di gets married. That's the day when Min-Min's mother suffers a stoke and is rushed to the hospital in a coma. It's also the day when NH bumps into his childhood sweetheart (married to an American) who he hasn't seen for 20 years. In the following weeks the family will have to reevaluate who they are and what their lives have become.

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Customer Reviews

65 Reviews
5 star:
 (35)
4 star:
 (11)
3 star:
 (11)
2 star:
 (3)
1 star:
 (5)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.0 out of 5 stars (65 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

59 of 61 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Film in the purest form, August 24, 2001
By 
Kwoks (Amsterdam Netherlands) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Yi Yi: A One and a Two (DVD)
Once in a while you walk out of the theatre and you find yourself giving a big sigh. When that happens, it's not because you're tired about a movie you just have seen. On the contrary. In my case it means that I just experienced an artform that cannot be compared with any other kind of art. Yi Yi is a good example of this. For those who watch carefully, they will discover that the story of Yi Yi is not more than a saga, perhaps even a soap plot of a ordinary middle class family in Taipei. But those who have patience to go beyond the facade of the ordinary, they will see a movie dealing about individualism, childhood, commitments, second chances, urban loneliness, broken promises, families, despair and death. But Yi Yi also shows us the small qualities of life: humour, laugther, life questions posed by a diligent and intelligent young kid, first love, courage, the meaning of life and the search for happiness. But Yi Yi is told without the explosivity of American Beauty. Instead, we witness (instead of watching passively) most of the narrative through windows and doors. Just as we're the neighbours of the protagonists of this film. Sometimes we will find ourselves shedding a tear. Sometimes we laugh. And that, my friend, is the reality of life. Shame that this one was overlooked by the Academy Award Association. Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon couldn't be a match to this one.
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43 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A slow-burning masterpiece, June 12, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: Yi Yi: A One and a Two (DVD)
Ostensibly, Edward Yang's Yi Yi (A one and a two) is a movie focusing on a family in contemporary Taipei, living through exceptional and unexceptional challenges that any one of us might be confronted with. But what the film really succeeds in capturing through its characters and events is the enormity of human existence; the challenges and rewards of living on this earth. It does so in a slow, penetrating manner that works its magic during the film, but even more so once after the film has ended.

The movie is rich with well developed characters and subplots that justify its three hour length. Yet in the course of all the seemingly tumultuous events that take place, little changes in the long term once the credits roll. But then, everything has changed; the movie begins with a wedding, tosses in a birth in the middle, and ends with a funeral. In between all these greater moments are the smaller though no less important things in life that almost every one of us can relate to at some level; love lost, regret, guilt, second chances, self-expression, happiness, sadness. The movies ambitions seem almost epic until you realize that there is nothing 'epic' about this family and its interactions. That is where the magic of this film really lies. Cultural differences don't matter here; you can always find a way to relate to Yang's characters through their common humanity. For many, we see emotional reservation, but Yang is able to expose even these characters through their confessions to their grandmother, who is comatose after a stroke. And then there is Yang Yang, the little boy of the family who is able to expose the nature of truth and exploration in a way only a little boy could.

I suppose that the thing that I enjoyed most about this film is that, even after seeing it a few days ago, I grow to appreciate it more, even as I write this review. Yi Yi is just an amazing film, perhaps the best ever made about a family, but to classify it as such is wrong. The movie is really a mirror; it is a beleivable, honest reminder of how life can be wonderful, and a pain, all at the same time.

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27 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Art at its most inspired and inspiring, July 26, 2001
By 
Robert Bezimienny (Sydney, NSW Australia) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Yi Yi: A One and a Two (DVD)
Cinema doesn't get any better than this. If you haven't seen this film then don't hesitate - buy the DVD right now, and play it when you're most in need of inspiration - it will dispel any doubts you might harbour about the power of film, the worth of art. The ability of Edward Yang to fuse imagination with, it must be assumed, an amazing honesty in reflecting upon his own life, to share what he holds most dear, and what evokes the most wonder, is something we, as an audience, can only marvel at and give thanks for. To say that 'Yi-Yi' inhabits the points of view of a child, an adolescent, an adult, a parent, a matriarch, the points of view of both male and female, that of the earnest, the honest, the ironic and idealistic, is to say that it truly touches upon life's richness. At one point in the film a character comments that films allow us to live life three times over, that's to say, they show us three times as much life as we could live by ourselves - most films give lie to this optimism, but 'Yi-Yi' itself makes such a statemest seem miserly. One of the best films I've ever seen.
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