Friday, September 2, 2011

The 5-Minute Epic Trailer Of Wei Te-Sheng's SEEDIQ BALE!


This year, Taiwan's SEEDIQ BALE has been making a lot of buzz lately. The epic movie is now among 22 movies in competition for the Golden Lion at the 2011 Venice Film Festival, and it's also ranked as the most expensive Taiwanese movie ever made at a reportedly hefty cost of NT$700 million (US$24 million). In the meantime, check out the 5-minute epic trailer below, as well as the official synopsis via Venice Film Festival.


Wei Te-Sheng's epic film Seediq Bale recounts an extraordinary episode from 20th-century history which is little-known even in Taiwan. Between 1895 and 1945, the island was a Japanese colony inhabited not only by the majority (Han Chinese immigrants) but also by the remnants of the aboriginal tribes who first settled in the mountainous land. In 1930 Mouna Rudo, the leader of one of the Seediq tribes settled on and around Mount Chilai, forged a coalition with other Seediq tribal leaders and plotted a rebellion against their Japanese colonial masters. It was to begin at a sports day meeting where the assembled tribesmen were to attack and kill the Japanese officials. The initial uprising took the Japanese by surprise and was almost entirely successful. But the Japanese soon sent in their army to crush the rebellion, using aircraft and poison gas. Mouna Rudo knew from the start that the relatively small force of Seediq tribesmen stood no chance of defeating the might of Japan. But he and his allies were sustained by the beliefs and myths which had nourished their tribes since time immemorial. Young males in the tribes had to undergo a rite de passage to become adult men, which gave them the right to have their faces tattooed. In tribal language, they became Saideke Balai - heroes of the tribe.