International Film Series Fall Schedule
SALISBURY, MD--¾ÅÐãÖ±²¥        University’s International Films Series focuses this semester on        movies from the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and Taiwan.         The series is selected and organized by Dr. Jim Welsh.  “I like what these films say about life in very turbulent        times,” he said.  “My        feeling is, if a film works, it doesn’t matter what culture it comes        from.”  All are in Chinese with subtitles.                      October 8-- Yellow Earth (director:  Chen Kaige, PRC, 1984) The landmark film        of China’s “Fifth Generation,” Yellow Earth is the story of        a young Red Army soldier studying in a small village in 1937 who changes        the life of a young woman. This was the first film by the director of Farewell        to My Concubine.                                         October 15-- A        Time to Live, A Time to Die (director: Hou        Hsiao-hsien, Taiwan, 1985)        This depiction of        childhood and adolescence won the Golden Bear Award at the Berlin Film        Festival.                                 October 29-- Good      Men, Good Women  (Hou Hsiao-hsien, 1995)      The final film of      Hou’s trilogy traces the modern history of Taiwan through the life of a      film actress.  It was named      Best Film at the Hawaii Film Festival.                          November 12 --The      Puppetmaster (Hou Hsiao-hsien, 1993)      Based on the      memoirs of 84-year old Li Tien-lu, Taiwan’s celebrated puppeteer and      official “national treasure.” According to J. Hoberman of the Village      Voice, it is Hou’s greatest film.                           November 26--The      Emperor’s Shadow       (Zhou Xiaowen,      PRC, 1996) The most expensive      film ever made in China, this opulent spectacle is a saga of two boyhood      friends at the dawn of China’s dynastic history (circa 200 B.C.).       One becomes emperor and the other a celebrated musician.                                 December 3--Yi      Yi  (A One and a Two      ,  Edward Yang, Taiwan/Japan,      2000) A comedy centered      on a “typical” Taipei family, Yi Yi  was named Best Film of the Year by both A.O. Scott of the New      York Times and Susan Sontag of Artforum, and Best Foreign Film      by both the New York Film Critics Circle and the Los Angeles Film Critics      Association. David Ansen of Newsweek called the film “Rich,      funny,  enormously humane.”                          Alll screenings are      Mondays at 7 p.m. in Fulton Hall Auditorium (Room 111).  Admission is free and the public is invited.  For      more information call 410-543-6271 or visit the SU Web site at      >