This is not a flaw in the script. It is a rigorous epistemology: The film’s sound design—crickets, wind, distant radio static—often overwhelms dialogue. Meaning is not in words but in the spaces between them. Hou trains us to listen for what is not said: the mother’s illness, the grandfather’s unspoken grief, the village’s collective shame.
Yet Hou refuses to give Ting-Ting a climactic “lesson.” The boy does not save anyone, does not achieve a moral breakthrough. Instead, the film’s structure mimics the logic of childhood memory: The runaway sister returns, but we never learn what happened to her. The old man dies off-screen, mentioned in passing. The camera holds on a tree, a fan, a bowl of lychees—the mundane objects that outlast drama. A Summer at Grandpa--s -Hsiao-hsien Hou- 1984-
That is the deep feature: a cinema of equal attention. And in that equality, a revolution. This is not a flaw in the script