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Chen Yi-wen

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chen Yi-wen
陳以文
Born
Occupations
  • Director
  • producer
  • screenwriter
  • playwright
  • actor

Chen Yi-wen (Chinese: 陳以文; born 1966) is a Taiwanese filmmaker and actor.

Career

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While Taiwanese directors are often associated with slower-paced, personal art films, Chen decided early on when he entered the film industry that he wanted to produce high quality, entertainment-oriented movies.

"The performing arts shouldn’t be inhibited by theory." Chen has established a solid foundation with a career that includes screenwriting, directing, as well as theatre, instilling his films with a unique and distinguished style.

Chen's first short film, Scenes of Violence, cost NT$3,000 to produce and earned NT$600,000 in returns from television sales in Taiwan and Japan. This success gave him the confidence to devote himself to the film industry. Chen was even interviewed by Wealth Magazine for an in-depth report on the success of his short film for its high ROI (return on investment).[1]

In 1998, a Japanese corporation invested in Chen's first feature film JAM. The film set a record of continuously running for over three months in theatres.

After the success of JAM, Chen completed a gangster film, A Chance to Die, once again getting financing from Japan. He asked Miki Mizuno, a well-known Japanese actress, and Takashi Kashiwabara, a famous Japanese idol who is also popular in Taiwan, to play the main characters. This was his second feature film.[citation needed]

For his third feature film, The Cabbie,[citation needed] Chen was able to get Rie Miyazawa, an accomplished Japanese actress, to play the leading role of the movie. The Cabbie was a fresh and inventive take on the Taiwanese comedy.

Chen's creativity and skills are on full display in the work of these three films. In being vivid and confident in the shooting, drawing on a strong foundation of the visual arts, the dramatics of storytelling, and with a focus on the shaping each characters’ unique inner lives, Chen has always been able to effectively create entertaining and audience-friendly films while still maintaining his a strong vision.

Chen has continued to search for new and innovative storytelling methods. He returned from a short-term sabbatical in New York, with a renewed focus on producing high quality films.

In 2006, Chen finished a 35mm feature film, Tripping, also known as Time Tripper, which combined the road movie with a martial arts film. In 2013, he produced and directed As the Winds Blow.

After 2015, Chen worked as an actor in many feature films, Godspeed, The Great Buddha+, Xiao Mei, High Flash, A Sun, The Falls ... and so on, and he also acted on Netflix programs, Wake Up 2, On Children, and Monstrous Me.

In 2019, Chen got the Best Leading Actor Award by the feature film A Sun in the 56th Golden Horse Awards and he also got the nominee of the Best Leading Actors by a short film A Taxi Driver in the 54th Golden Bell Awards.

The Best Actor Award (Short Film) went to Yi-Wen by a short film Growing Pains in the 40th Hawaii International Film Festival in 2020.

Filmography

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Worked as an actor in feature films

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Year Title Role Director
1989 The Man from Island West Ah-Jian (aka Ah-Chuan) Ming-Chuan Huang
1991 A Brighter Summer Day Horse Cart Edward Yang
1994 A Confucian Confusion Liren Edward Yang
1996 Mahjong Taxi driver Edward Yang
1998 Jam Restaurant owner Liu Chen Yi-wen (aka Yi-Wen Chen)
2000 Yi Yi Apartment guard Edward Yang
2011 Formosa Mambo Toro Chi-Tsai Wang
2013 How to Describe a Cloud Ophthalmologist David Verbeek
2014 Paradise in Service Colonel Yu Doze Niu
2015 Keelung Zi-Long Zhao Liang Qiao
2016 Godspeed Ah-Wen Chung Mong-Hong
2017 The Great Buddha+ Congressman Gao Hsin-Yao Huang
2018 Xiao Mei Landlord Maren Hwang
The Blue Choker Dorm Master Hsun-Wei David Chang
High Flash Lin-Kun Wei Ching-Shen Chuang
2019 Looking for Kafka Big Cock Jade Y. Chen
A Sun Ah-Wen Chung Mong-Hong
2020 Someone Who Was Lost Tai's Father Chi-Wai Cheong, Jhih-Yun Lin
Classmates Minus Congressman Gao Hsin-Yao Huang
A Leg Senior Policeman Yao-Sheng Chang
2021 Plurality Chi-Hwei Liao Aozaru Shiao
Treat or Trick Hsu Fu-Hsuang Hsu
The Falls Mr. Chen Chung Mong-Hong
Increasing Echo Fu-Sheng Yen Hsiang Chienn
Leave Me Along Chao Yang-Chung Fan
2022 Summer Yen Lui Che-Hsien Su
Funeral Chuan-Tsai Li Dan-Quei Shen
2023 The Pig, The Snake and The Pigeon Lu-ho Lin Ching-Po Wong
2024 The Embers Officer CHEN Chung Mong-Hong

Worked as a director

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Feature films directed

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Short films directed

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Awards and nominations for actor or director

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Year Awards ceremony Category Film Title Role (for actor) Result
1994 Taipei Film Awards Top Award (Non-commercial) Scenes of Violence Won
1995 4th Yamagata International Documentary Film Festival Awards for Excellence (New Asian Currents) Won
18th Golden Harvest Awards for Excellence Lessons Won
1998 Vancouver International Film Festival Jury Special Mentions Jam Won
2000 37th Golden Horse Awards Grand Jury Award The Cabbie Won
3rd Taipei Film Festival Grand Jury Award Won
Best Director Award Won
2001 3rd Deauville Asian Film Festival Best Director (Golden Lotus) Award Won
2019 6th Taoyuan Film Festival Jury Special Mentions A Taxi Driver Ro-Chang Tsuei Won
54th Golden Bell Awards Best Actor (Mini Series or TV Films) Nominated
56th Golden Horse Awards Best Leading Actor A Sun Wen Won
Taiwan Film Critics Society Awards Best Actor Won
2020 11st Youth Film Manual Annual Ceremony Best Actors of Annual Recommendations in 2019 Won
14th Asian Film Awards Best Actor Nominated
40th Hawaii International Film Festival Best Actor (Short films) Growing Pains Ren-Hsiung Huang Won
2022 24th Taipei Film Festival Best Leading Actor Increasing Echo Fu-Sheng Yen Nominated

References

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  1. ^ 李屏瑤. "《殺掉青春沒有夢》陳以文導演:電影不是夢,是活生生的現實". 博客來OKAPI. Retrieved 2013-09-03.
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