Taiwanese director Edward Yang died tragically young at the age of 59, leaving behind a lot of unfinished potential for the kind of movies he could bring into the world. However, the body of work he did create while alive is incredible, a reminder of simplicity and the power of filmmaking. He was one of the best-known Taiwanese directors of his generational cohort, producing films alongside Hou Hsiao-hsien and Tsai Ming-liang amid the Taiwanese New Wave. Born in China and raised in the capital of Taiwan, Yang would be educated in both Taiwan and the United States.

After getting a master’s in electrical engineering, Yang pivoted briefly while attending USC’s Film School, but decided originally making movies was not for him. Not too long after that, though, he returned to Taiwan and began producing his work. His name first appeared in the anthology film In Our Time, and he broke out into worldwide success in 2000 with the release of Yi Yi, which landed him the Best Director Award at the Cannes Film Festival. That would be his last movie before he succumbed to colon cancer. Yang’s filmography might be small but are full of impactful pieces of art that made their mark in the international cinema landscape. These are his best movies ranked.

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6 A Confucian Confusion

     AtomFilms  

Released in 1994, Yang’s A Confucian Confusion is a satire set in 1990s Taipei. The city has rapidly industrialized and modernized in recent years, becoming an urban metropolis that fits in with the global landscape in terms of brands and identity. The movie tracks the lives of a group of 20-something-year-olds, who each hold different occupations: the aspiring working woman, a wealthy fiancé, a novelist, and a talk show host. A Confucian Confusion dwells on a Taipei and Taiwan that no longer exists, showing it in the throes of modernization.

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5 Mahjong

4 That Day, On the Beach

     Central Motion Pictures  

That Day, on the Beach was Yang’s first film and is considered to potentially be the movie that kicked off the Taiwanese New Wave in the 80s. Sylvia Chang and Terry Hu, both actors young in their careers, star in the leading roles. Over three hours, the film finds two old friends, who have not seen each other in over a decade, reuniting. One of them is a world-renowned concert pianist that travels the world to perform, while the other owns a business. When they meet for tea after so long, they must fill in the cracks and stories the other missed.

3 A Brighter Summer Day

     Yang & His Gang Filmmakers  

2 Taipei Story

     Evergreen Film Company  

1985’s Taipei Story is one of the earlier releases of Yang’s career, as a part of the beginnings of the Taiwanese New Wave. Hou Hsiao-hsien and Tsai Chin star as a young couple living in Taipei. Chin portrays a young offer worker that wants to figure out her future in a world that is increasingly becoming more fast-paced, but her boyfriend, Lung, is stuck in the glory of his past. A former baseball player with a loyalty streak, he isn’t as faithful as he seems.

1 Yi Yi

Yi Yi is a work of art, visually compelling and graceful in almost every single scene. It is about the Jian family in Taipei, who live a comfortable, middle-class life in the city. Yi Yi opens with the patriarch running into an old flame, who lives on the other side of the world, and the matriarch’s mother falling into a coma after a stroke. The family’s dissatisfaction slowly begins to reveal itself here: the father hates his job, the mother is depressed, the daughter gets caught in a sticky situation, and the son is trying to learn to deal with everything going on in their lives through photography.