In the historically most famous ancestral house of the matrilineal Amis tribe in Taiwan, the carved pillars tell legends, such as the great flood, the glowing girl, the descending shaman sent by the Mother Sun, and the father-killing headhunting event. After a strong typhoon toppled the house in 1958, the pillars were moved to the Institute of Ethnology Museum. Recently young villagers, with assistance from female shamans, pushed the descendants and village representatives to communicate with ancestors in the pillars. They eventually brought the ancestral souls back and began reconstructing the house. In an environment highly influenced by western religions, national land policy, and local politics, the dream of the young people for cultural revitalization and to bring back not only the ancestral souls but also the soul of the village encountered many frustrations. This documentary interweaves reality and legends as well as the seen and the unseen as it records the unique case of repatriation and cultural revitalization.
Director
Director's Statement ▾
In the processes of filming Returning Souls, I was most touched by the Tafalong young people's earnest search for the tribal and ancestral souls. Allied with female shamans and leaders of the matrilineal family, the youth bravely faced the historical wounds and distortion, as well as contemporary challenges, marching on the road of cultural revitalization.
Filmography ▾
Credits ▾
Contact Information ▾
Production & Sales Company /胡台麗 Tai-Li HU
Email: taili@gate.sinica.edu.tw