Synopsis
"
Tsai found international acclaim in his second feature,
Vive l’Amour, which traces the odd, accidental love triangle that loosely binds a realtor, her street vendor lover and the lonely young man secretly smitten with the street vendor. A crisp and often satiric snapshot of an anxious
Taipei, the film’s moody portrayal of urban alienation and lovesick sexual games
– and its brilliant use of contemporary architecture – continues to draw insightful comparisons to
Antonioni. The empty apartment that serves as the uncanny center of
Vive l’Amour defines the hauntingly underpopulated, makeshift spaces that will recur throughout
Tsai’s cinema and serve as ambiguous stages, full of both melancholy and possibilities, where his characters comic, tragic and erotic struggles take on a strange and beautiful theatricality." – Harvard Film Archive