Chang Tso-chi


Chang Tso-chi is a Taiwanese film director. His 2002 film The Best Of Times was entered into the 59th Venice International Film Festival. His films won Golden Horse Award for Best Feature Film two times, for The Best of Times and .

Life and career

Chang Tso-chi was born in Chiayi. Both of Chang's parents migrated to Taiwan from Guangdong, Mainland China following the Chinese Nationalists' defeat in the Chinese Civil War in 1949. Chang started his career in the film industry as an assistant photographer and then assistant director. He learned his craft from renowned directors such as Hou Hsiao-hsien, Tsui Hark and Yim Ho. In 1988, he worked as Hou Hsiao-hsien's first assistant director on A City of Sadness.
In 1999, his second feature Darkness and Light was screened in the Directors' Fortnight section of the 52nd Cannes Film Festival, and won the Grand Prix at the 12th Tokyo International Film Festival. His third feature The Best of Times was entered into the main competition section of 59th Venice International Film Festival, and won Golden Horse Award for Best Feature Film.
In 2013, a female screenwriter accused him of rape after a party at his studio. Chang denied the charges, but admitted that he was completely drunk and blackout. After DNA evidence was produced, he was sentenced to three years and ten months in jail. He began served his term of imprisonment on April 10, 2015. During imprisonment, he finished a short film True Emotion Behind the Wall with all the actors and other staffs were his fellow inmates in prison in 2017, and this short later won Taipei Film Awards for best short film. He's been released on parole on 17 August 2017.

Filmography

Features