Still Here (還在) | Award-Winning Sundance Documentary Short Film

2021 ж. 7 Нау.
74 540 Рет қаралды

In Kaohsiung, Taiwan, a few residents refuse to leave their now-abandoned village.
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Still Here
Directed by Sean Wang
www.seanwangfilm.com/
"What makes a house a home? For me, it’s the things inside it that shape our memories and, as is often the case, it’s the ones which are long gone that I cherish and miss the most. Like the ugly shelving unit in my childhood bedroom, which our dog managed to climb once to get to a tub of Nutella, the mermaids I drew on the flowery wallpaper near my pillow, or the kitsch figurines my grandparents had collected on their travels, that I would examine for hours.
Sean Wang (3,000 Miles) also felt compelled to revisit his roots in his tenderly observed and deeply personal documentary short Still Here. Shot in a remote village in Taiwan, the nine-minute film uses compositional brilliance to paint a compelling portrait of the fragility of our physical homes, and exudes compassionate intimacy for both the individuals who appear in it and the spaces around them. The result both breaks and warms the heart.
In a village in Kaohsiung, Taiwan, there are just 6 residents left. Refusing to move away from their beloved, but now almost entirely abandoned village, around them, what were once homes which housed happy and thriving families, are now empty structures, slowly crumbling to dust. Still Here pays homage to the past by turning each scene into a cinematic work of art, hanging in its 4:3 frame. The emptiness it depicts is haunting but the characters ground the mood with their positive attitudes and persuasive charm.
“Still Here was filmed in the village where my grandmother lived, my mother grew up, and where I spent my childhood summers”, Wang explains to S/W as we discuss the motivation behind his short. “Nine years ago, my grandmother moved out of the village. Recently, I discovered that not only did nobody move into my grandmother’s house after she left, but that the entire village had been displaced and decayed for years, except for a few residents who refused to leave. I was curious to find out what their lives were like now that the village was abandoned - and why they decided to stay”.
Still Here brought back so many bittersweet memories, since I too spent many happy summers in my own grandparents’ village as a child. The early ones of my family around the fire, or collecting apples in the heat, of laughter, singing and the neighbour’s dogs barking in the distance, were soon replaced by the sight of empty streets and the sour smell of an unloved house. A feeling that will be familiar for many around the world.
Sean Wang performs a powerful balancing act by weighing the heavy emptiness of the abandoned houses, against the abundance of life in the characters he interviews. With their fascinating stories, impressive collections of knick-knacks and wool sweaters, and their stubborn refusal to be brought down by the sadness spreading around them, the residents of Kaohsiung are impossible not to love. Their spirits lift the otherwise achingly somber documentary, just like they bring life into the otherwise entirely dead village, making us smile while holding back the tears." - S/W Curator Serafima Serafimova
Director / Editor: Sean Wang
Producers: Cynthia Lee, Pamela Li, Sean Wang
Cinematographer: Zach Stoltzfus
Composer: Breton Vivian
Production & Post-Production Sound: Michael O' Connor
Colorist: Kinan Chabani
Reproduced on this channel with the permission of the filmmakers.

Пікірлер
  • I came here to learn from the best short films as I new to documentary filming. Here are my takeaways: 1. There is very little "fat" in this film. There is no unneceassary shots. No unnecessary sounds. Bare bones. Everything has a purpose. 2. It's simple. The simplicity of the filming enhaces the foundation of the film. Nothing over complex. Nothing fancy. Just simple 3. In the beginning, my biggest question was, "Why is this town abandoned. I wonder if that will be revealed?" By the end, I started to care a lot less, and just enjoyed the soul of this story: Who are the people who stick around a town that becomes abandoned? What is their why? Who are they? Brilliant work. I learned a lot!

    @flochfitness@flochfitness Жыл бұрын
  • So serene and masterfully crafted. A great reminder that you don't need the flashiest subject to make a moving film.

    @punpun9972@punpun99723 жыл бұрын
  • Vine por la recomendación de Daniela Montaguth, está increíble ❤

    @danialopez4322@danialopez43225 ай бұрын
  • Wonderful piece. A forgotten town contains memories of people who have been living there for entire life. They won’t leave because it is everything to them. I found out every time after the elders finished their words, their eyes were seems like keep telling stories. I was really enjoying it.

    @jiajiawu9375@jiajiawu93753 жыл бұрын
  • This short is so perfect. It somehow easily evokes the moods from movies like A Brighter Summer Day. I love this so much.

    @NidhinMohammad96@NidhinMohammad963 жыл бұрын
  • The Taiwanese flag at the end says it all. What a great build and lovely folks.

    @GavinusMaximusMaster@GavinusMaximusMaster Жыл бұрын
  • One of the best and breathtaking shot composition ever..... It’s not necessary to figure out why ppl moved specially based on Asian culture, but it is really bloodcurdling seeing how memories can be lost so easily along the way 😞😔

    @luiscavalcanti3431@luiscavalcanti34313 жыл бұрын
  • Love this, cinematography and shots are breathtaking!

    @emthegem8141@emthegem81413 жыл бұрын
  • This truely moved me. Beautiful ❤️

    @anne-mariegagnon97@anne-mariegagnon973 жыл бұрын
  • 第一個阿嬤的口音和新加坡老華校生的口音幾乎一模一樣!聽起來好親切❤

    @mynahlu977@mynahlu9772 ай бұрын
  • this was beautiful! thank you for making it

    @ReadByTiffany@ReadByTiffany Жыл бұрын
  • wonderful, so full of melancholy and yet so full of life

    @global_nomad.@global_nomad.3 жыл бұрын
    • Summed up beautifully😊

      @jadedmonk7001@jadedmonk70013 ай бұрын
  • What a beautiful film!

    @en_pei_ge@en_pei_ge Жыл бұрын
  • wonderful work!

    @the.hot.button@the.hot.button2 жыл бұрын
  • Love it 😍😍😍

    @marinadourgham1140@marinadourgham11402 жыл бұрын
  • Always good and entertaining movies ......❤️❤️

    @chawla7407@chawla74073 жыл бұрын
  • Beautiful ❤and so emotional, great work. but Why people leave from here?

    @EkPahadi@EkPahadi Жыл бұрын
  • defiantly made me think on the concept of "home". my folks have long since separated, there is no house to go back to. places to stay, but not home. I'd quite like a place with bones in the ground... I shall have to bring that up. Good film, Thank you.

    @arjovenzia@arjovenzia3 жыл бұрын
  • Knitting for lack of something else to do😮 Knitting is always my first choice of something to do😄 knit one, purl two, yarn over, pull through... calms the mind, fosters tranquility🙏 Somebody help that woman open an etsy shop so she can sell her beautiful sweaters🙌

    @thelotuspad@thelotuspad3 жыл бұрын
    • I agree with you!

      @BARAKABLESSING@BARAKABLESSING Жыл бұрын
  • Would love to know what this was filmed on

    @lachlansullivan-carey4293@lachlansullivan-carey42932 жыл бұрын
  • What was the premise of this story? Where is this village

    @donjohnson4368@donjohnson4368 Жыл бұрын
  • The woman at 3:40 has such a bright smile

    @mcbluematter@mcbluematter3 жыл бұрын
  • Great movie! I did notice though, they're speaking Mandarin and not Taiwanese or Cantonese. I'd be interested if someone can suggest why that might be.

    @RechtmanDon@RechtmanDon3 жыл бұрын
    • I'm Taiwanese - people don't speak Cantonese in Taiwan. Elders and some younger people may speak Taiwanese, but it's relatively dying out (sadly). I'm assuming that the filmmaker doesn't speak Taiwanese; hence the Mandarin.

      @azaleatsou2468@azaleatsou24683 жыл бұрын
    • I lived and worked there for eight years - Mandarin is the official language of Taiwan. What's called "Taiwanese" is actually just a variation of the Fujian dialect, and practically no one in Taiwan speaks Cantonese.

      @ForAnUnbrokenDuchess@ForAnUnbrokenDuchess2 жыл бұрын
    • They are inhabitants of a dependents’ village. These villages were built by the KMT for the troops and their dependents who retreated from mainland China after being defeated by the communists in 1949. Unlike the Minnan (aka. Taiwanese) speakers who had immigrated from Fujian or neighbouring southern provinces several centuries ago, inhabitants of these dependents’ villages were from various parts of China and mostly spoke Mandarin or their original regional dialects. From what I understand, there are some native Cantonese speakers living in these villages, but I guess being the minority, plus the aggressive promotion of Mandarin as the lingua franca during the Chiang Kai Shek era, most Cantonese speakers and their descendants would have assimilated and would use Mandarin. 😊

      @mynahlu977@mynahlu9772 ай бұрын
  • 😍

    @Maheshhhhhh@Maheshhhhhh3 жыл бұрын
  • 😢😢😢

    @itsm3._@itsm3._4 ай бұрын
  • omg

    @ailings@ailings Жыл бұрын
  • 😖🥶🥺

    @nirmaltamang6319@nirmaltamang63193 жыл бұрын
  • AAAAAAAAAA

    @rubenloup@rubenloup8 ай бұрын
  • That's it? Short of the week my ass!

    @amybowen5800@amybowen58003 жыл бұрын
  • "The word Home is so important." 🥲

    @giselaafonso@giselaafonso3 ай бұрын
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