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Chen Yu-hsun

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Chen Yu-hsun
Born (1962-06-21) June 21, 1962 (age 62)
NationalityTaiwanese
OccupationFilm director
Known forTropical Fish (1994)
Zone Pro Site (2013)
My Missing Valentine (2020)

Chen Yu-hsun (born June 21, 1962) is a Taiwanese commercial director and filmmaker born in Taipei, Taiwan.[1] He is the first director to win the three major film awards in Taiwan, including the Golden Horse Film Festival and Awards, the Taipei Film Awards, and the Taiwan Film Critics Society Awards, for the same film, My Missing Valentine (2020). He is widely known for his "offbeat, distinctly Taiwanese sense of humor that permeates his works".[2]

Biography

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After spending his fourth year at the so-called "Junior Fourth Class" (a cram school for students retaking high school after their junior year), Chen Yu-Hsun successfully entered the Cheng Kung High School after a grade retention. After failing the university entrance exam, he had no choice but to enlist in the military. Retaking the university entrance exam for the second time at the age of 22, he finally passed and enrolled in the Department of Educational Media and Library Sciences, now renamed as the Department of Information and Library Science, at the Tamkang University. Chen graduated from the Tamkang University in 1989.[3]

Chen always has a passion for painting and heavy metal music. It was not until his senior year that he got hold of the opportunity to work as a studio assistant in the Department of Mass Communication at the university, which led him to an internship with director Wang Shaudi. Chen Yu-Hsun found his true passion at the internship. That is, telling stories through visual images. Chen started his first job as a script supervisor for director Tsai Ming-Liang's comedy drama, Happy Motor Shop (1989).[3]

Chen shot his first feature film, Tropical Fish, in 1994, after years of working with television series. The film was commercially successful and critically acclaimed, making Tropical Fish one of the most remarkable comedies in the history of Taiwan cinema.[4]

Due to his dissatisfaction with the filmmaking environment and his box office failures in Taiwan, Chen had once left the film industry for 13 years. During that time, he worked on many humorous commercial advertisement projects that became well known among television audiences.[1][5]

His film The Village of No Return was released in 2017.[6] Chinese netizens campaigned to boycott the film, stating that Chen was sympathetic towards the Sunflower Movement.[6]

In 2020, his film, My Missing Valentine, won a total of five awards at the 57th Golden Horse Film Festival and Awards, including Best Narrative Feature, Best Director, Best Original Screenplay, Best Visual Effects, and Best Film Editing.[7][8]

Television series

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  • 1989: Happy Motor Shop (快樂車行)
  • 1989: Jia Jia Fu (佳家福)
  • 1991: A Space for the Little People—Are We Angels? (小市民的天空—我們算不算是天使)
  • 1992: Hen and Duckling (母雞帶小鴨)
  • 1994: Ngasal Maku—My Home (納桑嘛谷-我的家)[1]
  • 2016: Close Your Eyes Before It's Dark (植劇場-天黑請閉眼)

Filmography

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Screenwriting

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  • 2015: Co-wrote, with Director LEE Chung, the screenplay for The Laundryman

Performance for Film

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Select commercial

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Music Video

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Song Artist Album Date of Release
Nobody Else in my Heart Mayday Viva Love April 11, 2012
Fool Mayday Viva Love April 26, 2012
You're Not Truly Happy Mayday Poetry of the Day After 2008 in KTV

January 18, 2013

Breakthrough Day Mayday Poetry of the Day After 2008 in KTV

January 18, 2013

For Somethings, If You Don't Do It Now, You'll Never Do Mayday Second Round December 12, 2013

Publication

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  • Flying Off the Rails: An Amusing Comic Memoir of Filming in Mainland China《飛天脫線記:大陸拍片漫畫記趣》, published by the Chinese Television System Culture Enterprise Corporation in 1996 (ISBN 957-572-089-X)

Social participation and public speech

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  • In June 2012, Chen Yu-Hsun, along with Ko I-Chen, Wu Yii-feng, Leon Dai, Luo Yijun, and Ya Ai, and 60 other artists and cultural workers, initiated a 30-second flash mob anti-nuclear protest. Gathered in a ren (人/human)-shaped formation on Ketagalan Boulevard in front of the Presidential Office Building in Taipei, Taiwan, they chanted the slogan, "I am a human, I am against nuclear power."[9]
  • In 2013, Chen Yu-Hsun criticized President Ma Ying-jeou on Facebook regarding the Cross-Strait Service Trade Agreement. He questioned why the president did not inform the people and the legislature when signing the agreement, but instead choose to announce to world other irrelevant personal details.[10]
  • During the 2014 Sunflower Movement, Chen Yu-Hsun personally visited the Legislative Yuan to show support for the protesting students, teasing that, "I heard that suncakes were delivered here, so I come to have some." He also posted on Facebook, "Our grandfathers' revolution allows our fathers to have the right to vote, but if the fathers vote recklessly, the sons have to start a revolution." He also stated in his Facebook post that, "I don't know about the other people, but what I want is to defend democracy. Politicians must respect their people. No matter how important the Service Trade Agreement could be, it will never be as important as our democracy."[11]
  • On April 10, 2014, when the Sunflower Movement withdrew from the Legislative Yuan, Chen Yu-Hsun again posted a photo on Facebook with the caption, "The world may not become better, but you will." He thanked the students, saying, "When you can see things clearly, you can appreciate them better. When you can appreciate the world better, you can then gain at lot from it. Colorful, vibrant, warm, humorous, and infinitely creative. Thanks to this student-led civic movement, which has sparked new thinking in Taiwan. We will become better."[12]
  • On January 5, 2017, Chen Yu-Hsun released a statement emphasizing that he had never supported Taiwan independence movement. He stated, "I have never had the belief in Taiwan's independence, nor do I support it or consider myself a pro-independence person." He emphasized that standing against the Service Trade Agreement does not equal being pro-independence. He also expressed the hope for open-mindedness, setting aside biases, and enhancing mutual trust between both sides of the Taiwan Strait. He also expressed the desire for smoother exchanges in the film and television industries between Taiwan and China.[13][14]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e 李翠卿 (July 2013). "導演陳玉勳 從低路師到總舖師的戲夢人生". 親子天下雜誌(47期). Archived from the original on 2014-08-17. Retrieved 2013-11-11.
  2. ^ "Chen Yu-hsun 陳玉勳 | Taiwan Post New Wave". 2021-05-28. Retrieved 2023-06-01.
  3. ^ a b "【影人專訪】我要成為喜劇王——陳玉勳". Taiwan Film Festival. 2021-09-15. Retrieved 2023-06-02.
  4. ^ "Chen Yu-hsun 陳玉勳 | Taiwan Post New Wave". 2021-05-28. Retrieved 2023-06-02.
  5. ^ Lin, Ke-Ming (2016). "A Turn on Yu-Hsun Chen's Comedy Film: A Digital-Age Perspective (陳玉勳的喜劇轉折:一種數位時代的思考)". 藝術學研究 (18): 135–183 – via Chinese Electronic Periodical Services (CEPS).
  6. ^ a b Xin, Qiang (2024). "Selective Engagement: Mainland China's Dual-Track Taiwan Policy". In Zhao, Suisheng (ed.). The Taiwan Question in Xi Jinping's Era: Beijing's Evolving Taiwan Policy and Taiwan's Internal and External Dynamics. London and New York: Routledge. p. 76. ISBN 9781032861661.
  7. ^ 陳玉勳奪金馬最佳原著劇本 笑言真不是人幹的 Archived 2021-03-01 at the Wayback Machine,中央社,2020年11月21日
  8. ^ 陳玉勳奪金馬獎最佳導演 消失的情人節抱回第4獎 Archived 2021-03-04 at the Wayback Machine,中央社,2020年11月21日
  9. ^ 柯一正凱道反核 警約談、國稅局上門 Archived 2012-07-11 at the Wayback Machine, 自由時報, 2012年6月8日
  10. ^ 自由時報電子報 (2017-01-06). "為保中國票房 陳玉勳撇挺台獨兩岸不討好 - 自由娛樂". 自由時報電子報. Retrieved 2023-06-02.
  11. ^ ETtoday新聞雲 (2014-03-25). "即/陳玉勳現身立法院:聽說太陽餅送來這,想吃一下 | ETtoday星光雲 | ETtoday新聞雲". star.ettoday.net (in Traditional Chinese). Retrieved 2023-06-02.
  12. ^ Storm.mg (2017-01-05). "救新片中國市場 導演陳玉勳:我不支持、也沒有台獨的理念-風傳媒". www.storm.mg (in Chinese (Taiwan)). Retrieved 2023-06-02.
  13. ^ 反服貿=台獨?導演陳玉勳聲明:不支持台獨 不是台獨人士 Archived 2018-03-23 at the Wayback Machine, 聯合報, 2017年1月5日
  14. ^ "健忘村 The Village of No... - 健忘村 The Village of No Return". www.facebook.com. Retrieved 2023-06-02.