A Borrowed Life

A Borrowed Life (Chinese: 多桑; pinyin: Duōsāng) is a 1994 Taiwanese film and the directorial debut of Wu Nien-jen. The film depicts cultural and regime change in Taiwan. The film's running time is 167 minutes. Reviews by Ken Eisner in Variety and Stephen Holden in The New York Times noted that the film was autobiographical and told largely from the perspective of director Wu Nien-jen as a child. Eisner was critical of the film for its excessive focus on the father-son relationship, which left other characters' viewpoints unexplored. Chen Kuan-Hsing examined languages and dialects used in the film, linking differences to the cultural changes portrayed within, as Japanese rule was lifted and the Kuomintang assumed control of Taiwan.

A Borrowed Life - 2008-01-01T00:00:00.000000Z

My Love , The Enemy - 2006-03-27T00:00:00.000000Z

EP - 2005-02-09T00:00:00.000000Z

Similar Artists

Letterbox Tragedy

OH!

Dear Whoever

Chomp Chomp Attack!

A Heartwell Ending

A Last Failure

Not For Now

A Story In Blood

Oh Sweet Ransom

Kill Your Romeo