Days (2021)

days-film-tsai-ming-liang.jpg

Direction: Tsai Ming-liang
Country: Taiwan

The insipid long shots and minimalist ways of Malaysian-born Taiwan-based director Tsai Ming-liang has always required patience and tolerance from the viewers. His latest opus, Days, appealingly captures two solitary men in their daily routines with contemplative tones and a nearly speechless, deliberately unsubtitled approach. Peculiarly framed, the images are loaded with loneliness, sadness, pain and affection, speaking by themselves in a way that is real and clear. 

Ming-liang’s long-standing muse, the actor Lee Kang-sheng (their association started in 1992 with the great The Rebels of the Neon God) is Kang, a middle-class man who lives in an apartment in Hong Kong and undergoes treatment for his neck and back. He comes across Non (Anong Houngheuangsy), a younger Laotian immigrant living in Thailand and whose meticulous cooking we follow with curiosity. Their painful loneliness are momentarily interrupted when meeting in a Bangkok hotel room for an erotic massage, and then, silently sharing a meal at a local restaurant, just like two old pals. 

Although categorically artsy and observant in its details, the film is ridiculously long for what it intends to say, flirting with boredom. On the other hand, the subtle tension-release flux of this modern alienation (in which relentless background noises and occasional silences play a role) is disconcerting, and raw emotions can naturally emerge. Simultaneously mesmerized and exasperated, I struggled to reach the end, and I don’t believe the ones who say they didn’t. What I do believe, is that it’s hard to cope with this tremendous loneliness in a life dominated by mundane practices.

3.jpg