
Kao Wei-heng
Directing
Known For

Two high school students, different from others in personality and experience, try to figure out how they want to show up in the world.
Performing

A-Wei drifts through life until a nighttime glance at A-Bin sparks something fragile. In fleeting moments and open spaces, a tender, uncertain love unfolds.
Boy Drenched in Water

In Taipei New Park, a woman uses a device meant to find hidden cameras but accidentally brings the park’s statues to life. These statues, linked to Taiwan’s colonial past, seem to rise to avenge a tragic plane crash during a 1964 national day’s military parade under Chiang Kai-shek’s military law.
The Fissure of the Red Sight

He, who is about to serve mandatory military service, chose to wander the streets of Taipei on the last night spent with his girlfriend who is about to leave the country. During his time here, his troubles were not just about getting a haircut, dealing with hemorrhoids, encountering a boy, but also a subtle pain.
Ti Tou, Zhi Chuang, Jia Wa Wa Ji

Father lay on the living room sofa, enveloped in plaster, resolutely clinging to his identity as a patient. Shengwen, ensconced in the driver's training car, fixed his gaze on the instructor beside him. He was reluctant to confront the situation at home and his perpetually elusive father, yet he found himself equally unable to face the instructor by his side. Inevitably, he began to transform into a reflection of his father.