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The River, a 1997 film by director Tsai Ming-liang, is only
now getting belated distribution in the United States and for that serious film lovers may
be grateful. Tsai's most recent film, What Time Is It
Over There?, was screened at this year's New York Film Festival, and, indeed, is
making the rounds of the festival circuit, but it does not appear to have found a U.S.
distributor as yet. It's a sad, if understandable, situation that fine, thoughtful art
films have such difficulty reaching their public.
The River is not for multiplex audiences. Stylized and
essentially nonverbal, it requires patience and an openness to a highly individualistic
mode of expression. Such patience is amply rewarded with a deeply affecting film
experience that will linger in the memory long after the commercial drivel has faded into
the oblivion of the ordinary.