FILMS FOR YOUR EARS: A TRIBUTE TO TU DUU-CHIH
Surely
Tu Duu-chih's name will not be familiar to many people, including those
who saw films by Hou Hsiao-hsien, Edward Yang, Tsai Ming-liang and Wong
Kar-wai whose latest film, 2046, has just been released all over France,
and apart from those film buffs who carefully read end credits.
Yet, to me and many others, this name belongs to the best Asian sound
artist. All the best Asian film-makers are ready to pull out all the
stops so that the man they think is " passionately obsessed with sound
" can work with them.
Since the creation of the Festival of the 3 Continents in 1979, except
for a few Taiwanese films with good-quality sound, I have too often
found that Asian films have very poor soundtracks, not to mention the
music which, nine times out of ten, is pathetically bad.
However, when I saw Tsai Ming-liang's "Bu San" (Goodbye, Dragon
Inn), a film with very little dialogue, I came across an outstanding
soundtrack and thought it was clear that the person behind its sound
was an artist in his own right.
It then seemed obvious to pay tribute to this major sound technician
- something we never did before as part of the festival. This year,
we are very happy to celebrate Tu Duu-Chih, a man who fully deserves
it for his artistic contribution to Taiwanese and, in recent years,
Asian cinema. The artistic quality of a film mainly depends on the director,
who can be considered as a team leader. Yet one should never forget
that his choice of actors, cinematographers, sound technicians, etc.
is crucial. To be able to work with such a talented technician as Tu
Duu-chih can only bring priceless quality to a film.
Alain Jalladeau
Mr
Tu is a perfect example of a simple romantic process: when you are in
love with something, you can become idealistic, spend more time, work
harder, overcome obstacles, fight off failures and convert them into
valuable experiences, until one day, you just suddenly realize you are
on the top of the world with the one you love. Mr Tu is no doubt the
best in the world with sound: something he loves to do. He used to spend
days in his studio without sleep to help his filmmaker friends, including
myself, complete their work in the best possible quality before major
premier events such as Cannes. Mr Tu knows the quality of sound makes
up half of a film experience, with the other half being the image. Mr
Tu knows the quality of sound makes up more than half of the revelation
of deep subtle emotions in an actor's performance. Mr Tu knows the quality
of sound makes viewers feel deeper and broader in a spatial surrounding
that usually has only less than 45 degrees of visual perspective with
a 50 mm lens. I feel very lucky to have run into Mr Tu in the very first
film I made. From that day on, I knew I would not start making a film
without Mr Tu. I am very certain that there are quite a few filmmaker
friends who feel the same.
Edward Yang
According
to Claude Lévi-Strauss, the artist does not copy, but recreates reality
through his or her own personality. Art is the means man has found to
make himself a place in this world. An artist's work is a constantly
evolving occupation. But what never changes is his creative technique.
A professional baseball pitcher used to say : "For 30 years, all I did
was throwing a ball. What else can I do?" Enriched with great experience,
such activity may look like a simple act as natural as a language. Through
the diversity of his creative acts, the artist, unlike the artisan,
masters many more techniques which become a whole grammar. I have known
Tu Duu-chich for 30 years. We call him " the obsessive and passionate
sound man ". He has been making and designing sound since the Seventies.
Today, he keeps recreating sound...
Hou Hsiao-hsien
About Tu Duu-chih Young
Taiwanese film-makers call him Big Brother Tu, a nickname that shows
both familiarity and great respect.
I started working with Big Brother Tu only from my fifth feature film
"What Time Is It Over There?" onwards. However, we first met
earlier. In 1983-1984, he took his first award with "Run Away",
which I wrote the script of. In 1992, while I was working on the post-production
of my first feature "Rebels of the Neon God", the sound man
on my film and the Central Motion Pictures studio did not get on with
each other very well. I was very worried. On top of it, my father had
just died. One day, Big Brother Tu came by the studio. He saw some footage
of my film and decided to help me, although I was still a young film-maker
and we hardly knew each other. He told me to just go to my native country
for my father's funeral and he would look after everything. Some time
later, he left the CMPC, then the biggest Kuomingdang studio.
Many years later, we met each other again in a freer film world. We
worked together on "What Time Is It Over There?", "The
Skywalk Is Gone", "Goodbye Dragon Inn", and "A Cloud
on the Edge of the Sky". And we will continue to work together.
Tsai Ming-liang
Tu
Duu-chih is one of the best sound recordists I have ever worked with.
I am very pleased to know that the Nantes Film Festival will do a tribute
to his body of work this year.
Wong Kar-wai