Tsai Ming-liang (Chinese: 蔡明亮; born 27 October 1957) is a Malaysian filmmaker based in Taiwan and one of the most celebrated directors in the Slow Cinema genre and the "Second New Wave" of Taiwanese cinema.

Tsai has written and directed 11 feature films and many short films and television films. He is best known for his feature films Vive L'Amour (1994, for which he won the Golden Lion), The River (1997), Goodbye, Dragon Inn (2003) and Stray Dogs (2013). All of his productions star Lee Kang-sheng.

Early life

Tsai was born in Malaysia. He is of Chinese descent and spent his first 20 years in Kuching, Sarawak, after which he moved to Taipei, Taiwan. This, he said, had "a huge impact on [his] mind and psyche". "Even today", Tsai has said, "I feel I belong neither to Taiwan nor to Malaysia. In a sense, I can go anywhere I want and fit in, but I never feel that sense of belonging."

Tsai graduated from the Drama and Cinema Department of the Chinese Culture University of Taiwan in 1982 and worked as a theatrical producer, screenwriter, and television director in Hong Kong. From 1989 to 1991, he directed several telefilms. One of these, Boys, starred his muse, Lee Kang-sheng.

Career

1990s

Tsai's first feature film was Rebels of the Neon God (1992). A film about troubled youth in Taipei, it starred Lee as the character Hsiao-Kang. Lee went on to appear in all of Tsai's feature films as of 2023. Tsai's second feature, Vive L'Amour (1994), is about three people who unknowingly share an apartment. The film is slow-paced, has little dialogue, and is about alienation; all of these became Tsai's trademarks. Vive L'Amour was critically acclaimed and won the Golden Horse Awards for best picture and best director.

Tsai's next film was The River (1997), in which a family has to deal with the son's neck pain. The family is similar to one that appears in Rebels of the Neon God and is played by the same three actors. The Hole (1998) is about two neighbors in an apartment. It features several musical numbers.

2000s

In Tsai's next film, What Time Is It There? (2001), a man and a woman meet in Taipei before the woman travels to Paris. This was Tsai's first film to star Chen Shiang-chyi, who starred in his next few films alongside Lee. Goodbye, Dragon Inn (2003) is about people inside an old cinema that is closing down. For this film, Tsai included even longer shots and fewer lines of dialogue than in previous films, a trend that continued in his later work. The Wayward Cloud (2005) is a sequel to What Time Is It There? in which Hsiao-Kang and Shiang-chyi meet again and start a relationship while Hsiao-Kang works as a pornographic film actor. This film, like The Hole, features several musical numbers.

Tsai's next film, I Don't Want to Sleep Alone (2006), was his first set in Malaysia and is about two different characters, both played by Lee. In 2007, the Malaysian Censorship Board banned the film based on incidents shown depicting the country "in a bad light" for cultural, ethical, and racial reasons, but later allowed it to be screened in the country after Tsai agreed to censor parts of the film according to the board's requirements. Tsai's next film, Face (2009), is about a Taiwanese director who travels to France to shoot a film.

2010–present

Tsai (left) was named Asian Filmmaker of the Year at the 2010 Busan International Film Festival.

Tsai's next feature film was Stray Dogs (2013), about a homeless family.

Most of Tsai's output in the 2010s was dedicated to his exhibition films, in particular the Walker series (2012–24), the subject of which was a monk played by Lee who travels by walking slowly, usually surrounded by a busy background.

In 2020, Tsai released Days, which competed for the Golden Bear at the Berlinale film festival.

In 2021, Tsai released Wandering, a short installation film with no dialogue, which follows a woman visiting an exhibition of Tsai's "Walker" series in Taiwan.

In December 2024, Tsai made his Australian in-person debut at an "In Conversation" event at the Australian Cinémathèque, Gallery of Modern Art (GOMA) in Brisbane. This event coincides with a special retrospective of Tsai's work as part of QAGOMA's Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art.

Honours

Tsai's honours include a Golden Lion (best picture) for Vive L'Amour at the 51st Venice International Film Festival; the Silver Bear – Special Jury Prize for The River at the 47th Berlin International Film Festival; the FIPRESCI award for The Hole at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival; and the Alfred Bauer Prize and Silver Bear for Outstanding Artistic Achievement for The Wayward Cloud at the 55th Berlin International Film Festival; the Grand Jury Prize at the 70th Venice International Film Festival for Stray Dogs. In 1995, he was a member of the jury at the 45th Berlin International Film Festival.

In 2003, The Guardian voted Tsai No. 18 of the 40 best directors in the world. In 2014, he was named an officer of the Order of Arts and Letters by the government of France.

Personal life

Tsai is gay and has incorporated queer themes into his films. Since 2021, he has lived in the mountains near Taipei, where he renovates and lives in abandoned apartments. He shares his living spaces with his long-term collaborator, Lee Kang-sheng, in a platonic relationship.

Filmography

Feature films

YearEnglish titleOriginal titleNotes
1992Rebels of the Neon God青少年哪吒
1994Vive l'amour愛情萬歲Golden Lion winner
1997The River河流
1998The Hole
2001What Time Is It There?你那邊幾點
2003Goodbye, Dragon Inn不散
2005The Wayward Cloud天邊一朵雲
2006I Don't Want to Sleep Alone黑眼圈
2009Face
2013Stray Dogs郊遊
2020Days日子

Documentaries

YearTitle
2008Sleeping on Dark Waters
2015Nà gè xià wu [That Afternoon, aka Afternoon]
2018Your Face
2025Back Home

"Walker" series

YearTitle
2012No Form
Walker
Diamond Sutra
Sleepwalk
2013Walking on Water
2014Journey to the West
2015No No Sleep
2018Sand
2022Where
2024Abiding Nowhere

Other exhibition works

YearTitle
2001Fish, Underground (or A Conversation with God)
2002The Skywalk Is Gone
2008Madame Butterfly– part of the Lucca Film Festival project "Twenty Puccini"
2015Xiao Kang
2017The Deserted
2019Light
2021Màn bù jīng xīn [Casually] [aka Wandering]
Liang ye bu neng liu / The Night
The Moon and the Tree
2022Where do you stand, Tsai Ming-Liang?

Segments

YearTitleNotes
2004Welcome to São Paulo"Aquarium"
2007To Each His Own Cinema"It's a Dream"
2012Beautiful 2012"Walker"
2013Letters from the South"Walking on Water"
2015Beautiful 2015"No No Sleep"

TV films

YearTitle
1989Endless Love
The Happy Weaver
Far Away
All Corners of the World
1990Li Hsiang's Love Line
My Name is Mary
Ah-Hsiung's First Love
1991Give Me a Home
Boys
Hsio Yueh's Dowry
1995My New Friends

Casting

Tsai frequently recasts actors he has worked with on previous films:

ActorRebels of the Neon God (1992)Vive L'Amour (1994)The River (1997)The Hole (1998)What Time Is It There? (2001)Goodbye, Dragon Inn (2003)The Wayward Cloud (2005)I Don't Want to Sleep Alone (2006)Face (2009)Stray Dogs (2013)Days (2020)
Lee Kang-shengYYYYYYYYYYY
Lu Yi-chingYYYYYYY
Yang Kuei-meiYYYYYYY
Chen Shiang-chyiYYYYYYY
Chen Chao-jungYYYYYY
Miao TienYYYYY
Norman AtunYY

External links