Review: Tsai Ming-liang's DAYS, No Words Needed

Lee Kang-sheng and Anong Houngheuangsy star in a languid new film by Taiwanese auteur Tsai Ming-liang.

Taiwanese auteur Tsai Ming-liang abandoned scripted narrative with Stray DogDays is his first feature film in 6 years.

His output since 2013 has been limited to short-to-medium length films, related to What Time is it There? (2001) and Wayward Cloud (2005), as well as various commissioned films, omnibus contributions and gallery installations, but of course all of them starring his muse, Lee Kang-sheng. In personal life, Lee was struck with debilitating health problems in recent years and Tsai documented his recovery over the years in various places.

So it seems it's only fitting that the couple's new film would feature some of Lee's harrowing medical treatments. Days is also the most intimate and touching Tsai film in years.

The film consists of series of uncut long takes where a camera is stationary, except for certain scenes in the middle. It starts with Lee sitting on a chair looking out the window. The scene seems to go on forever. It is slowly revealed that he is in some sort of health rehab in the countryside. In the next scene, he is seen soaking in a tub motionlessly.

Next is wide shot of a squalid kitchen where a young foreign man (Anong Houngheuangsy) is preparing a fish soup. It's the whole process from beginning to end. He cleans the fish, rinses vegetables, drains, starts a fire, gets the soup started, tastes it constantly as he adds more ingredients, lets it simmer while he goes in and out of frame, all taking place before your eyes.

Next is Lee getting what seems to be an elaborate and painful acupuncture procedure. This long scene also consists of long takes, but from different angles. It's an agonizing scene to watch; the treatment Lee is receiving is a combination of acupuncture, electro stimulation wired on the needles and moxa (burning of mugworms) on top of those needles.

From the low angle in an extended period of time, we see both agony and ecstasy reflected on Lee's face. It is quite jarring as some of the moxa embers fall on Lee's skin and the pins catch fire near his face. This combination of agony and ecstasy turns out to be quite a theme in Days.

The next scene features Lee with a neck bracelet, precariously supporting his head with his hand, walking down a busy Hong Kong street while onlookers glance at the camera.

We see these daily routines of the two characters separately as they go on. It is crazy to think that baby-faced Lee is 50 years old now. In a series of unflattering close ups, you can see that time has taken a toll. His gait, also, is not as youthful. He knowingly lets his ailing flesh be recorded in a brave performance exposing his vulnerability out in the open for all to see. 

The two men, one old and the other young, finally get together in the second half of the film, albeit as a business transaction. It's Houngheuangsy as an erotic masseur and Lee his client in what seems to be a fancy hotel room. Again, this sexually explicit scene is that of agony and ecstasy: the young man gives the old man a massage and a handjob. Lee moans in pain and pleasure.

After their intimate sessions, Lee gifts Houngheuangsy a tiny music box that the young man plays for a long time. They engage in conversation in broken English over the noodles in a street market.

Portraying sexual intimacy and urban loneliness  are not new territories for Tsai, but his acknowledgement that beauty is fleeting is something new in his oeuvre. This nearly silent film is both melancholic and tender. It's a deeply philosophical examination on human connections and the fleeting beauty of life.

Review originally published during the 2020 New York Film Festival. Days will open in US theaters on Friday, August 13, 2021, via Grasshopper Film.

Dustin Chang is a freelance writer. His musings and opinions on everything cinema and beyond can be found at www.dustinchang.com

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