Thu, Sep 29, 2005
Yi-chun from Taipei is a slender girl and she loves to eat. That's a problem for the 17-year-old dance student, since she is supposed to be on a strict diet. Her family and her teachers are watching her closely. There is not much "laissez-faire" for teenagers in Taiwan, the over-achieving country. Good grades in school are mandatory. Used to 12 hours school days, kids and teenagers are thrown under the harsh regime of competition in school, Yi-chun also takes extra lessons in math and teaches at the dance school where her mother works. To be an teenager in Taiwan is not about "sex, drugs and rock 'n roll" but about discipline, good grades and the struggle for the best possible start to professional life. Taiwan is perhaps the most advanced and developed country in South-east Asia. For the last 5 years it has enjoyed a fully fledged democracy, which stands up against the threats of the superpower China. The film follows Yi-chun in her everyday life in school, where we still find remnants of the military dictatorship like raising the flag and target shooting. We also witness Yi-chun's little escapes to the night markets and her soft rebellion against the always critical older sister. "Made in Taiwan" is part of a series of documentary portraits of 17-year-old girls all over the world, commissioned by the GermanTV channel ZDF/3sat. The series offers a revealing perspective on the varieties of young women's lives - their hopes and dreams, constraints and yearnings, their preoccupation with parental expectation and religious tradition, their fantasy yet criticism of marriage, longing for home and safety or search for newness and excitement. Each film focuses on one girl - her world and her worldview.