Double Vision (2002 film)

(Redirected from Shuang tong)

Double Vision (Chinese: 雙瞳; pinyin: Shuang tong) is a 2002 mystery horror film directed by Chen Kuo-fu. The plot is about an FBI agent working with a troubled Taiwanese cop to hunt for a serial killer who is embedding a mysterious black fungus in the brains of the victims. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2002 Cannes Film Festival.[3]

Double Vision
DVD cover for Double Vision
Directed byChen Kuo-fu
Written byChen Kuo-fu
Su Chao-pin
Produced byChen Kuo-fu
Huang Chih-ming
StarringTony Leung Ka-fai
David Morse
Rene Liu
CinematographyArthur Wong
Han Yun-chun
Edited byMan Chi-ming
Wei Te-sheng
Chen Kuo-fu
Music byCincin Lee
Production
companies
Distributed byColumbia TriStar Film Distributors International
Release dates
Running time
113 minutes
110 minutes (USA)
CountriesTaiwan
Hong Kong[1]
LanguagesMandarin
Taiwanese
English
Box officeUS$1.5 million[2]

Plot

edit

Police detective Huang Huo-tu, a Waisheng ren (Mainland Chinese) in Taiwan, has relegated himself to a mundane job as a Foreign Affairs Officer as self-punishment for blowing the whistle on corruption in the force, and his colleagues have turned their backs on him. His young daughter is left traumatized after being taken hostage in a gun battle, and his wife Ching-fang is filing for divorce. Huang is on the verge of a severe nervous breakdown.

A series of bizarre deaths in Taipei baffle local investigators, including a Christian preacher of foreign nationality found disemboweled. The priest is involved in the Taiwan-US military trade, so FBI agent Kevin Richter is called in to help. Huang, who can speak English, is made his liaison. Kevin, the topmost serial killer expert in the field, was previously investigating a series of murders in US in which all victims appeared willing to die.

The crime scenes imply the involvement of supernatural forces. In one case a businessman froze to death in his office in the middle of a heatwave; in another the mistress of a prominent official called the fire department and was later found burned to death - with no sign of a fire ever occurring in her apartment. Richter is skeptical but Huang, who is more receptive to supernatural possibilities, suggests they investigate a local cult. After consulting a scholar in Academia Sinica, Huang and Kevin find that the killings follows a form of Taoist belief that one must fulfill five types of suffering required to become a Xian, an immortal being. According to legend, having double pupils allows a person to see the sins of another. The scholar tells them that there is a legend of a person who had double pupils, he used his ability to send these sinners to hell, and subsequently acquired immortality through his actions.

They also find that all victims have done something against their conscience, and that a kind of fungus was used to induce hallucination, pleasure and guilt which made the victims kill themselves. An advanced technology was used to spread the fungus, and the Police traced this technology to two bosses of an electronics company in Hsinchu Science Park. The men spent their fortune to move a Taoist temple into their company, where many cultists gather. The police enter the building and finds the temple. They start to arrest everyone but the cultists fight back. There is a massacre and many officers and cultists die. After the massacre Kevin and Huang finds a seemingly innocent girl hidden inside a chamber at the back of the temple. The case is closed.

The next day Huang finds Kevin dead, having pulled out his own tongue, which is the fifth suffering required. Huang finds that both he and Kevin were infected with the fungus. Huang begins to hallucinate, tormented by the guilt he feels for his wife and daughter. He sees the girl survivor beckoning to him so he goes off in search of her. He visits the hospital but is informed that the girl left. He then goes to the temple where the girl is waiting for him. It is revealed that the girl is the actual cult's leader who has the double pupils in her eye and believes that by having Huang kill her, she can complete the final and last requirement to become immortal. The girls puts Huang through a series of hallucinations, his guilt building and eating away at his consciousness, until it finally culminates into Huang killing her.

There are two endings to the film. Both using Buddhist Gatha. The happy ending reveals that "love is immortal" (有愛不死), hinting to us that Huang doesn't die and he is saved because of the love for his family. The other version from the DVD reveals that he dies.

Cast

edit

Influence

edit

The film is a Columbia Pictures production, and the director Chen Kuo-fu, at the time, was the head of Columbia Pictures' Asian branch. It is one of a series of attempts by Columbia Pictures to invest and produce Asian movies with its Asian branch. The film impressed Taiwanese directors with its "Hollywood way" of filmmaking. With this film the director Chen Kuo-fu accumulated his experience in international collaboration and went on to work in China.[4] The film's assistant director Wei Te-sheng and producer Jimmy Huang said they were stimulated by the big-budget effects of the film, and determined to make a movie on big budget. They later collaborated in local hit Cape No. 7 and big budget epic Seediq Bale.[5] The film's screenwriter Su Chao-Pin later directed Silk. Leon Dai, a supporting actor, later directed No Puedo Vivir Sin Ti. They said that they were stimulated by this production.[6]

Awards and nominations

edit
List of Accolades
Award / Film Festival Category Recipient(s) Result
22nd Hong Kong Film Awards Best Screenplay Chen Kuo-fu, Su Chao-pin Nominated
Best Actor Tony Leung Ka-fai Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Rene Liu Won
Best Cinematography Arthur Wong Nominated
Best Film Editing Man Chi-ming Nominated
Best Art Direction Timmy Yip Nominated
Best Visual Effects Peter Webb Nominated
39nd Golden Horse Awards Best Supporting Actor David Morse Nominated
Best Sound Effects Paul Pirola, Tu Duu-chih Nominated
Best Visual Effects Patrick Wang, Peter Webb Nominated
4th Asian Film Critics Association Awards Best Supporting Actress Rene Liu Won

References

edit
  1. ^ "Double Vision (2002)". Archived from the original on August 2, 2021.
  2. ^ "Double Vision". Box Office Mojo.
  3. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Double Vision". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 2009-10-30.
  4. ^ Teng Sue-feng. Translated by David Smith. "Chen Kuo-fu--Back With a "Message" Archived 2013-10-05 at the Wayback Machine. Taiwan Panorama. Dec. 2009.
  5. ^ Teng Sue-feng. "Can the Blockbuster Save Taiwan Film?" ---. Dec. 2009. Archived 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine Taiwan Panorama. "Biggest Production in Taiwan Film History-Seediq Bale" Archived 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine. Taiwan Panorama. Feb. 2009.
  6. ^ Kuo Li-chuan. Translated by David Smith. "The Making of No Puedo Vivir Sin Ti" Archived 2011-07-18 at the Wayback Machine. Taiwan Panorama. October. 2009.
edit