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Cine Buffed
The Left-Handed Girl, Taiwan’s official Oscar entry, unfolds with a calm
confidence that immediately draws you in. What makes it stand out is its refusal to sensationalize life’s conflicts; instead, it embraces the honest, unvarnished messiness that defines being human. The film weaves together moments of uncertainty, imperfect choices, and emotional vulnerability with remarkable subtlety. Its rawness feels deeply authentic, nothing is exaggerated for effect, yet everything lands with surprising force.
The characters move through their struggles in a way that mirrors real life: not with dramatic breakthroughs, but through small, meaningful shifts that accumulate over time. The director’s restrained touch allows the story’s emotional weight to emerge naturally, inviting the viewer to sit with discomfort, compassion, and reflection.
Overall, The Left-Handed Girl is a beautifully grounded portrait of life at large, quiet, messy, and profoundly human.
5 Dec’25 08:20
Soumya Sarkar
A sweet devil in a cruel tired traffic
Vikas Yadav
For Shih-Ching Tsou, the people on the screen are merely figures in a
diorama—positioned, posed, and given prefab lines. FULL REVIEW HERE -
Popcorn Reviewss
#Taiwan's Official Submission to the Oscars of 2025, #LeftHandedGirl is an
aching examination of understated pathos featuring solid performances that make this drama a beautifully
MAN OF CINEMA
Growing up in asian households we all have heard that to do all things from the
right hand, the left hand is not considered a good hand. But never gave a reason why. Taking that
