Cute Girl (1980) Poster

(1980)

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6/10
Hou's debut,and my first Hsiao-Hsien Hou viewing.
morrison-dylan-fan28 December 2020
Warning: Spoilers
In the middle of watching the just under four hour long Battles Without Honor and Humanity: The Complete Saga (1980-also reviewed) I decided to check for any other box sets I had of films from the 80's waiting to be opened. Having picked up the set years ago after reading praise for The Assassin (2015),I decided it was finally time to explore the works of Hsiao-Hsien Hou.

View on the film:

Backed by a informative booklet and detailed video essay, Masters Of Cinema present a great transfer, with the day-glo colours having a bright shine and the audio being cleaned.

Later disowning the film (a bit harsh!) writer/directing auteur Hsiao-Hsien Hou teams up with his regular cinematographer of the era Kun-Hou Chen and sketches out future recurring motif's of Taiwan New Wave (TNW) stylisation, underneath the brashly coloured Rom-Com.

Driving the romance between the city and country life in extensive TNW outdoor location filming, Hou finds stylish space in the zoom-ins, growing long takes in wide-shots with prominent empty spaces Hou pans over towards the bubbling romance, landing a wonderful sight-gag spoofing the lovers running into each others arms imagery.

Reuniting after he starred in Good Morning, Taipei (1979) (written by Hou) Kenny Bee (whose voice is dubbed by a Taiwanese actor) gives a jaunty, gurning performance as the heart-throb Da-gang,whilst fellow Pop star "The Queen of Hats" Fong Fei-fei pairs her cherry Rom-Com smile as Wen, with a rebellious glance of kicking away the force marriage her parents are trying to set-up.

Carving their love in a tree, the screenplay by Hou is one made up of many branches, which never settles on which direction to grow in, at one moment indulging in grating broad Comedy, and then flipping over to sweet nothing teen Rom-Com Drama over who will get with the cute girl.
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6/10
A corny but sweet love story
gbill-7487722 March 2024
As light and airy as a cream puff, this Taiwanese entry in the romcom genre from director Hou Hsiao-hsien is certainly sweet, but maybe a little too sweet. It's notable for being Hou's first film, as well as for starring pop diva Feng Fei-Fei, the "Queen of Hats," opposite singer/songwriter/actor Kenny Bee. The pair perform a few songs on the soundtrack, played over action like them riding bikes, and him crashing after noticing her pedaling by. You get the idea, there's a lot of corniness here. She plays a young woman who's being set up by her rich parents to a guy she hasn't even met, but then meets a surveyor out in the country. Her prospective husband turns up, leading to the softest love triangle you can imagine, and an awfully convenient way of resolving things. The film isn't very memorable, but it did have me thinking of another of Feng Fei-Fei's songs from the period, Hao Hao Ai Wo (Love Me Well), which I guess has a permanent place in my mind, so it had that going for it.
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