Our Times

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Our Times
File:Our Times, Movie Poster.jpg
Theatrical poster for the Taiwan market
Directed by Frankie Chen
Produced by Yeh Ju-fen
Starring Vivian Sung
Darren Wang
Dino Lee
Dewi Chien
Music by Hou Chih-chien
Production
companies
Focus Films
Hualien Media International
Huace Pictures (Tianjin)[1]
Distributed by Hualien Media International
20th Century Fox (Singapore, Malaysia)
Release dates
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  • 14 August 2015 (2015-08-14) (Taiwan)
Running time
134 minutes
Country Taiwan
Language Standard Chinese
Box office US$81.5 million[2]

Our Times (Chinese: 我的少女時代, literally "The Time of My Teenage Years") is a 2015 Taiwanese romance film directed by Frankie Chen. It is the directorial debut of Frankie, who previously directed television dramas. The film stars Vivian Sung as Lin Zhen Xin, an ordinary schoolgirl, and Darren Wang as Xu Tai Yu, the school's notorious gang leader.

Plot

The film opens in the present day, where Lin Zhen Xin, also known as Truly Lin,(Joe Chen) is an ordinary office worker who gets ridiculed by her subordinates. Dejected, she listens to a cassette recording of an old Andy Lau song. This brings her back to her high school days, where she was an ordinary high school girl. She has a crush on Ou Yang Fei Fan (Dino Li), the school's most popular male student.

One day, Truly Lin (Vivian Sung) receives a chain letter, warning her of impending doom if she does not pass the message on. Naively, she passes it on to Xu Tai Yu (Darren Wang), the school's notorious gangster boss, her math teacher and Tao Min-min (Dewi Chien), the school's most popular girl. While Tai-yu was reading the letter, he got injured in an car accident. After weeding out the letter's sender, the angry Tai Yu made Truly Lin his 'friend' and forced her to run errands for him in exchange for leaving Fei-fan alone, thus making her his errand-girl.

By chance, Truly Lin accidentally overhears a conversation between Min-min and Fei-fan and discovers that they are in a secret relationship. Dejected, she creates an alliance with Tai-yu, who likes Tao Min-min, to break the couple up. Throughout the course of events, Truly Lin and Tai-yu began to understand each other better, and their friendship evolves as they began to learn a thing or two about true love. Eventually, they develop feelings for each other.

Tai-yu later discovers of his brain clot, caused by the car accident in which he was reading Truly Lin's letter. His parents decide to send him overseas, leaving Truly Lin with no way to contact him in an era without social media.

18 years later, Truly Lin leaves her unhappy job and relationship upon having rediscovered herself. She is still unable to book a ticket to an Andy Lau concert that is set to take place in Taipei, where our two main characters, Truly Lin and Tai-yu (Jerry Yan), will be reunited.

Cast

Production

Our Times is the directorial debut for Frankie Chen, who previously produced Taiwanese television dramas.[3]

Release

Outside of Taiwan, Our Times was released in Hong Kong and Macau box office on 15 October 2015.[4] It was then simultaneously released in both Singapore and Malaysia cinemas on 22 October 2015.[5][6] The film was released in China on 19 November 2015.[7]

Out of Asia, Our Times was screened during the Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival on 8 November 2015.[8]

Our Times has often been compared to the 2011 hit romance film You Are the Apple of My Eye, which features a similar school-based romance plot line and takes places in the same time period (1990s).[3][9] The Associated Press characterised the film as "the female version" of You Are the Apple of My Eye.[3] However, the director and cast members dismiss this comparison, with director Chen questioning "How can my youth be the same as someone else's?".[3][9]

Reception

Box Office

As of January 20, 2016, the film has grossed US$81.5 million worldwide, with its largest territory being mainland China with US$54.8 million.[2]

Our Times was drawn into a box office dispute when the Taipei Theater Association, who distributes box office data, stopped publishing such data shortly before this film was released.[10] Despite the absence of official box office data, the film's distributor, Hualien International Film, announced publicly that the film topped the Taiwanese box office.[11] This has led to accusations that Hualien International Film, which counts major Taiwanese cinema chains Ambassador and Showtime as investors, deliberately stopped the release of box office results so that it could falsify reports of the film's box office performance.[11]

Notwithstanding the dispute over the film's box office gross, Our Times performed well at the Taiwanese box office.[12] The film grossed over NT$5,000,000 from its sneak preview screenings prior to its official box office launch.[13] In the first week of its release in Taiwan, the film achieved a box office gross of over 100 million New Taiwan dollars. As of 13 October, the film had grossed over NT$156 million at the Taiwanese box office.[14]

Our Times performed well in Singapore as well, clinching the box office champion in just the second week of its release.[15]

On its first four days at the mainland Chinese box office, the film grossed CN¥110 million.[1] It is the highest-grossing film from Taiwan at the mainland Chinese box office.[16]

Critical Reception

Our Times received lukewarm critical reviews. The South China Morning Post gave Our Times a rating of 3 out of 5 stars.[4] It described the film's plot-line as "excessively saccharine will-they-won’t-they affair" and advised viewers "to simply surrender to the wave of sentimentality".[4] However, it added that the film's "fairy-tale ending might feel hugely cathartic for the already converted".[4] Similarly, the Taipei Times reviewer Ho Yi criticised the film's plot-line, saying that it "become repetitive at times, adding no new meaning to the narrative".[17] However, Yi praised the cast members, in particular Vivan Sung, whom she complimented as "playing her role well with the comic effect without caricaturing her role."[17] Yi also felt that the director has done a fine job with her attention to detail of the era which the film was set in.[17]

In Singapore, The New Paper gave the film a rating of 5 out of 5, describing the film as "an irresistible combination of nostalgia, humour and heartfelt emotions" and praising it for "pack[ing] a punch for capturing the bittersweet feelings of youthful love".[18]

Accolades

Award Category Result Recipient
52nd Golden Horse Awards Best Actress Nominated Vivian Sung[19]
Best New Director Nominated Frankie Chen[19]
Best Original Film Song Nominated Xiao Xing Yun (小幸運)[19]

References

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External links