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DramaCrime

Terrorizers

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An uncompromising look into urban life from the eyes of a voyeuristic photographer, a rebellious teenager, and a married couple teetering on the edge of adultery.

Release Date : 1986-12-19

Language :Mandarin

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Central Motion Picture Corporation

Production Country : Taiwan

Alternative Titles : The TerroriserThe Terrorizers

Cast

Cora Miao

Character Name : Zhou Yufang

Original Name : 繆騫人

Gender : Female

Lee Lichun

Character Name : Li Lizhong

Original Name : 李立群

Gender : Male

King Shih-Chieh

Character Name : Chen Weibin

Original Name : 金士傑

Gender : Male

Ku Pao-Ming

Character Name : Police Chief

Original Name : 顧寶明

Gender : Male

Liu Ming

Character Name : Shu An's Mother

Original Name : 劉明

Gender : Female

Wang An

Character Name : Shu An

Original Name : Wang An

Gender : Female

Shao-Chun Ma

Character Name : Little Qiang

Original Name : Shaojun Ma

Gender : Male

Yu An-Shun

Character Name : Da Shun

Original Name : Yu An-Shun

Gender : Male

Chia-ching Huang

Character Name : Little Qiang's Girlfriend

Original Name : Chia-ching Huang

Gender : Male

Shanqun Hong

Character Name :

Original Name : Shanqun Hong

Gender : Male

Chonghua Ni

Character Name : Little Jin

Original Name : Chonghua Ni

Gender : Male

Ming-Yang Shih

Character Name :

Original Name : Ming-Yang Shih

Gender : Male

Feng Kang Chu

Character Name : Business Manager Brothel Frequenter

Original Name : Feng Kang Chu

Gender : Male

Te-Ming Lu

Character Name :

Original Name : Te-Ming Lu

Gender : Male

Hsiao Chih-wen

Character Name :

Original Name : Hsiao Chih-wen

Gender : Male

Reviews

C

CinemaSerf

@Geronimo1967

2023-09-04

This is my first foray into the world of Edward Yang and though I cannot claim to have followed all of the plot in this complex drama, it is still an oddly compelling watch. Oddly? Well that's because though the characters appear real enough in a plausible sense, the storyline develops itself and them in a none-too-predictable, not always coherent, fashion. We start with a scene that I suspect would have had the local tourist board in conniptions. A shoot-out between a drug-dealing gang and the police that leaves a body lying in the street. Even trying to move that proves perilous. That peril continues to run throughout the story as we meet a dysfunctionally married couple. He, "Li" (Li-Chun Lee) is a writer who's suffering from a fairly terminal block. She "Zhou" (Cora Miao) is an aspiring clinician who cannot quite reconcile the significance of his failure with her own need for satisfaction (professionally and emotionally). This relationship continues to serve as a conduit for a rather broad-brush look at urban life in Taiwan that includes just about every aspect of human behaviour including the scene-stealing efforts of brothel-keeper "Shu An" (Wang An) who fleeces her clients whilst they are in flagrante delicto and who is, herself, the object of the desire of a photographer who proves to be of some interest to the police. What's curious about this film is that you start off assuming it's all a sort of gangster flick with the locals under the yoke. What it gradually turns into is a story about "terror" in it's multiple guises - and the most potent illustrations of that are not necessarily located where we think they ought to be. I reckon this needs a couple of viewings to get the best from it as there's plenty to get your teeth into as these characters develop quite distinctly into people - love them or hate them!