Shantanu will discuss various films he watched and other related things with it.
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Thursday, February 2, 2012
In the Mood for Love AKA movie that saved my weekend
Friday,
27th Januray 2012. I am done with my masters, big burden off my shoulders. I am
already planning my weekend ahead. I have seen only 2 movies in the whole 2
weeks before that, so I already have few DVDs checked out from my library. I
come home, relieved and high in anticipation to make up for my last 2 weeks.
First up is Witness for the Prosecution(1957), something which I wanted to
see for a long time but let me just say it wasn't up to the Billy Wilder
standards. I am starting to think that Agatha Christie books are damn good
books but somehow they don't transfer into great screenplays. Next up is highly
anticipated Akira(2001). It turns out to be Scarface(1983) of Anime, if
that makes any sense to you. Does everything had to be that over the top ?
Little disappointed but still hopeful because next one is Michael Heneke's Code Unknown(2000). It will be way to premature to say anything about it because
I am almost sure that I haven't understood it. So, it remains more like 'Work
in Progress'. So, by Sunday afternoon, I am pretty desperate, almost begging on
my knees: 'Please let me like the next movie I watch'. So, I keep Dr.Strangelove(1965) aside because I am not a Kubrick fan traditionally, dig
into my Netflix queue, go up and down few times and decide to go with In the Mood for Love(2000) and Thank God for that !! It made my weekend.
Set in
Shanghaiese enclave of Hong Kong in 1962, In the Mood for Love(2000) tells us the story centered on two
couples or rather two halves of young couples leaving as tenants, across the
hall from each other. We have Mrs. Chan, who works as a secretary in the export
company and her husband works for a multinational company which keeps on
sending him on frequent trips to Japan and Mr. Chow, who is a newspaper editor
and his wife also does a job which keeps on sending her out a lot. After they
move in as neighbors on the same day, they get introduced to each other as
anyone of us would to our neighbors - occasional hi-hello, a casual
smile and eventually warm up to each other with more interaction and their common liking of martial arts stories. Mr. Chow is having a little problem in his marriage since he found out that his wife lied to him about something. One of his colleagues plants a seed of doubt in his mind when he tells him that he saw his wife with another man. Initially, he discards the seemingly outrageous thought but then he notices that Mrs. Chan has exact same handbag as his wife. He decides to talk to her and see if he can make any sense out of it. When they meet over dinner, they realize that both their spouses are cheating on them with each other and they both suspected it all along.
Now that they know the truth, they are drawn together being passengers on the same train. They wonder how did their spouse's affair start ? Help each other confronting their spouses by role playing and if nothing else helps, be there for each other when they both are lonely. Even though their intentions are admirable to start with, as they keep on spending more time together, borders start to faze out. Director
Kar Wai Wong takes a simple story, the restraint
and growing passion between these two people and then go on playing
endless blue notes to get us hooked. Without actually showing anything on screen, he uses rain and eye gestures to do the work of creating the right mood to the great effect. One more thing he uses really well is their role playing game , which starts as to help each other understand what exactly happened. However, when they both are not sure of how many borders they are ready to cross, unsuspectingly they cross the borders of their roles and what we get is an extremely vivid collage of their feelings. One more fun fact, apparently Wong never uses any script. Most of his work is improvisation, deciding which direction to head next on the spur, crafting the story and mood as he went along.
It bagged Actor's Award and technical prize which includes editing, cinematography and production design. If you have seen few Chinese movies, you
might recognize Tony Leung who did Leo DiCaprio's role from The Departed(2006) in original Infernal Affairs(2002) or General Zhou Yu in Red Cliff (2008-09) double and
amazing Maggie Cheung. She looks so stunning in it that I am sure her husband
was blind to cheat on her. There is no way, a man can cheat on her with his
eyes open, there just isn't. Apparently, lot of effort was put in to make her
look pretty. According to IMDb, she has worn 46 different cheung-won dresses in
the movie, different one for each scene and it used to take 5 hours to do her hair and make-up. Apart from being visually brilliant with exceptional use of slow motion to set mood for viewers, one more very striking thing about it is, this Soundtrack called "Yumeji's Theme"
is probably one of the best I have heard ever. It is not only sensual but is
used to the ultimate effect to set the tone throughout the movie. If all this doesn't put you in mood, probably nothing will.
Congrats on the Masters buddy! Sorry you didn't fully "get" Code Unknown, but I'm really glad In the Mood for Love helped save your weekend. A great, great film that I need to revisit soon.
Thanks Alex. Problem with code Unknown was I had many questions that were still unanswered even at the end of movie. I really liked it until the last 10 minutes, especially editing is amazing and off course Juliette Binoche, but I need to watch it again to get few answers.
And In the mood for love is on Netflix. So, you can watch any time.
Yeah most all Haneke movies are like that, very very puzzling. I actually own In the Mood for Love, but haven't seen it in about 3 years. Gotta get on it.
I can't think of another Chinese film that shot so beautifully.I hope you have bought the Criterion dvd,it has tons of great extras.Also,if you enjoy Wong Kar-wai's film,I strongly recommend Chungking Express.
I am sorry David, I saw it on Netflix. But, it is a kind of movie I would like to know extra stuff about. I will also try to find some more Wong's work. Thanks for commenting.
Congratulations on completing your MASTERS matey!1 Big props from me!!
ReplyDeleteSounds like you have all sorts of fun planned... enjoy it!
Thanks Scott !! I will try. :)
DeleteCongrats on the Masters buddy! Sorry you didn't fully "get" Code Unknown, but I'm really glad In the Mood for Love helped save your weekend. A great, great film that I need to revisit soon.
ReplyDeleteThanks Alex. Problem with code Unknown was I had many questions that were still unanswered even at the end of movie. I really liked it until the last 10 minutes, especially editing is amazing and off course Juliette Binoche, but I need to watch it again to get few answers.
DeleteAnd In the mood for love is on Netflix. So, you can watch any time.
Yeah most all Haneke movies are like that, very very puzzling. I actually own In the Mood for Love, but haven't seen it in about 3 years. Gotta get on it.
DeleteI can't think of another Chinese film that shot so beautifully.I hope you have bought the Criterion dvd,it has tons of great extras.Also,if you enjoy Wong Kar-wai's film,I strongly recommend Chungking Express.
ReplyDeleteI am sorry David, I saw it on Netflix. But, it is a kind of movie I would like to know extra stuff about. I will also try to find some more Wong's work. Thanks for commenting.
Delete