Synopsis
陣頭
A-Tai (Alan Ko) narrates that he is the son of Uncle Da (Chen Po-cheng) and Aunt Da (Samantha Ko), who run a troupe in Taichung. Uncle Da's troupe does traditional performance in front of religious processions. The religion requires performers to "initiate the faces and pose as gods"—to put on a special face painting, or to put on a heavy body puppet costume, both of these represent gods' persona. The performance demands training of martial art, acrobatics and endurance, and the performers are negatively associated with gangsters by the society. Uncle Da has been competing with Wu-cheng (Liao Jun), who studied with Uncle Da under the same master. A-Tai grew estranged with his father and the troupe, and went to Taipei to study Rock music, until a mysterious old man in blue coat bids him home.
The 2011–2013 Taiwan Window
23 Taiwan films released in this three-year window, ranked here by audience rating. Din Tao: Leader of the Parade sits at position #15.
#1Warriors of the Rainbow: Seediq Bale – Part 2: The Rainbow Bridge
★ 8.1 · 2011
#2Beyond Beauty: Taiwan from Above
★ 7.6 · 2013
#3You Are the Apple of My Eye
★ 7.4 · 2011
#4Warriors of the Rainbow: Seediq Bale – Part 1: The Sun Flag
★ 7.3 · 2011
#5Touch of the Light
★ 7.2 · 2012
#6In Time with You
★ 7.2 · 2011
#7Black & White: The Dawn of Assault
★ 6.9 · 2012
#8Girlfriend Boyfriend
★ 6.7 · 2012
The 2010s Taiwan Landscape
Catalog density by release year in the 2010s. Highlighted year (yellow) is when Din Tao: Leader of the Parade premiered. 70 total titles in this decade from Taiwan.
Reception Benchmarks
Ranked #146 of 174 Taiwan films indexed here (16th percentile by TMDB audience score).
Rating is -0.9 points below the Taiwan average of 6.6/10.
Among Taiwan Drama productions specifically: #106 of 118 (top 90%).
Production Details
| Primary Country | Taiwan |
|---|---|
| Original Language | Chinese |
| Production Companies | Magnificent Film Entertainment |
| Runtime | 2h 4m |
| Release Date | January 20, 2012 |
| IMDb | tt2301291 |