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DeadSwan
08-05-2005, 01:14 PM
2046

Desire and Loss in the Curve of a Back


By MANOHLA DARGIS
Published: August 5, 2005

IN "2046," a story of longing and loss, the passage of time is marked not by the hands of a clock, but by the women who pass through one man's life. The man in question, a newspaper hack, lives in a glorious ruin called the Oriental Hotel, where the thin walls shake violently from the sexual exertions of the clientele. A ladies' man given to vigorous wall-shaking, the writer turns a blind eye to the hotel's decrepitude even as he keeps its female guests fixed in his sights. In this ecstatically beautiful film, walls never tumble, only women do.



"2046" is the eighth feature film from the Hong Kong director Wong Kar-wai and the long-anticipated follow-up to his 2000 art-house favorite, "In the Mood for Love." Like the earlier film, "2046" first played at the Cannes Film Festival (in 2004), where it provoked a modest scandal. Mr. Wong, who famously works to his own rhythms, either very fast or very slow, arrived at Cannes late enough that the initial screenings had to be rescheduled. The version shown at Cannes was clearly unfinished and, perhaps as a consequence, "2046" was wanly received, even by some Wong admirers. More than a year later, the special effects are in place, as are crucial images that reinforce both the film's themes and its structure. The result is an unqualified triumph.

Set mostly over three years, starting in 1966, "2046" centers on Chow, a roué with brilliantined hair and the mustache of a lounge lizard, played by Mr. Wong's favorite leading man, Tony Leung Chiu-wai. Chow supports himself by writing sexually titillating fiction, though only on extreme occasion does he put pen to paper to interrupt his usual nightclub trolling. One day, he meets an old flame, Lulu (Carina Lau Ka-ling), who is now known as Mimi and lives in the Oriental Hotel, in Room 2046. When Chow later returns to her hotel, he discovers that Lulu-Mimi has disappeared. He subsequently moves into the adjacent room, 2047, whereupon he meets the two women whose stories will cast shadows over his own.

Mr. Wong's films are often described as romantic, doubtless because they invariably involve sad-eyed lovers under the spell of impossible desires. Born in Shanghai, Mr. Wong moved to Hong Kong with his family when he was 5, and that may help explain why he rhapsodizes about loss with such tenderness. Even so, this early displacement doesn't elucidate why he is less interested in love than in its wreckage, in the sighs, tears and agonies that sometimes follow in love's wake. One of the first images in "2046" is of the epigram "all memories are traces of tears," a bit of throw-pillow sentimentalism that might sound ominously maudlin if the tears in Mr. Wong's films didn't corrode like acid.

Soon after Chow moves into the hotel, he meets the owner's oldest daughter, Jing (Faye Wong), while she's practicing dance steps and Japanese in the temporarily vacant room next door. Jing, whose love for a Japanese man (Takuya Kimura) is driving her belligerent father to distraction, hovers in the ********** during the first part of the film, much of which involves an affair between Chow and the latest occupant of Room 2046. Chow, who intermittently narrates the film, first sees his new neighbor, a call girl named Bai Ling (Ziyi Zhang), through a grille. The time is September 1967, and months of civil unrest in Hong Kong have just ended.

The affair between Chow and Bai Ling consumes only part of the story (a science-fiction allegory that Chow writes constitutes another), but Ms. Zhang's shockingly intense performance burns a hole in the film that gives everything, including all the other relationships, a sense of terrific urgency. The riots that rock Hong Kong, glimpsed in battered newsreel images and mentioned in passing, have nothing on the emotions that turn this woman's face into a landscape of pain. Much of "2046" unfolds in rented rooms and cramped hallways, where the characters navigate around one another, the camera trained on their faces as if searching for clues. The outside world, by contrast, remains as fragmented as an unsolved jigsaw puzzle: a street lamp in the rain, a stretch of decayed wall, a nightclub coat room.

Although the men and women in "2046" move through tight, claustrophobic interiors that are perfect representations of their boxed-in interior states, the spaces they inhabit all but shudder with luridly bright colors and dizzying geometric patterns that suggest an underlying tumult. In one scene, Chow stands almost motionless next to the swirling patterned wallpaper of the hotel's hallways as he listens outside a locked room to the hotel owner berate his older daughter for her affair. Like the opera that the father plays at a thunderous volume to hide the noise of the family's fights, and like the shimmering, jeweled cheongsams worn by Bai Ling, the wallpaper swirls express what the characters themselves cannot: their repressed desires, their playfulness and drama.
blond twist of hair in Hitchcock's "Vertigo," the image has a power that renders further explanation superfluous.

Like Hitchcock, Mr. Wong is at once a voyeur and fetishist par excellence. No slouch when it comes to men, he lights Mr. Leung and Mr. Kimura as if they were MGM stars from the 1930's. His actresses, meanwhile, who also ******* Gong Li and Maggie Cheung Man-yuk, dazzle like Olympian goddesses. From the way he photographs the women in this film and elsewhere, the director appears particularly fond of how the opposite sex looks from the back. One of his signature images is of a woman in a figure-hugging dress and requisite high heels bending forward ever so slightly and away from the camera. In one of the most plaintively lovely moments in "2046," Ms. Wong leans forward to whisper a secret while wearing a silvery dress, a posture that gives her the aspect of an enormous gleaming teardrop.

"2046" is awash in such wrenching and charming tears. If everyone in this film weeps, including Chow's counterpart - a character in his hallucinatory science-fiction story that works as a parallel to his own story - it's because everyone is also captive to memory. In "2046," memory isn't just a favorite snapshot, a blast from the past. It is where everyone lives, whether they want to or not, whether giggling in a tawdry Hong Kong hotel in 1967, hurtling through the atmosphere on a train in the future or sitting in a darkened movie theater. Like film itself, memory freezes time. Memory turns finite moments into spaces - a hotel room, say - that we return to again and again. It gives us a glimpse of the eternal and, like art at its most sublime, like this film, a means for transcendence.

"2046" is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). The film has some discreet sexual scenes but nothing explicit.

2046

Routinely criticized for his weak narratives, Mr. Wong is one of the few filmmakers working in commercial cinema who refuse to be enslaved by traditional storytelling. He isn't the first and certainly not the only one to pry cinema from the grip of classical narrative, to take a pickax to the usual three-act architecture (or at least shake the foundation), while also dispatching with the art-deadening requirements (redemption, closure, ad nauseam) that have turned much of Big Hollywood into a creative dead zone. Like some avant-garde filmmakers and like his contemporary, Hou Hsiao-hsien of Taiwan, among precious few others these days, Mr. Wong makes movies, still a young art, that create meaning through visual images, not just words.

And so in "2046," the wallpaper swirls find a visual echo in the curls of a metal grille that, in turn, echo the loops of some cursive handwriting, the curlicue of smoke that rises from Jing's lighted cigarette and the impossibly long curve of Bai Ling's arched back. Mr. Wong fills the frame with these sensuous circles and coils like an obsessive doodler. These compulsive repetitions reach an apotheosis in the film's most mysterious image: a large cavity that looks at once like the amplifying horn of a Victrola and a sexual orifice of unknown provenance. Mr. Wong never explains the significance of the cavity because, like Kim Novak's
Opens today in Manhattan and Los Angeles.

Produced, written (in Cantonese, Mandarin and Japanese, with English subtitles) and directed by Wong Kar-wai; Christopher Doyle, Lai Yiu Fai and Kwan Pun Leung, directors of photography; edited by William Chang Suk-ping; music by Peer Rabin and Shigeru Umebayashi; Mr. Chang, production designer; released by Sony Pictures Classics. Running time: 129 minutes. This film is rated R.

WITH: Tony Leung Chiu-wai (Chow Mo Wan), Ziyi Zhang (Bai Ling), Gong Li (Su Li Zhen), Faye Wong (Wang Jing Wen), Maggie Cheung Man-yuk (Slz1960), Carina Lau Ka-ling (Lulu), Takuya Kimura (Japanese lover) and Chang Chen (cc1966).

alexthestampede
08-05-2005, 01:16 PM
trainspotting

HorseflyKing
08-05-2005, 01:18 PM
Originally posted by DeadSwan
2046
yeah, that does look awesome.

Also:
Aeon Flux

ChristHimself!
08-05-2005, 01:28 PM
Originally posted by alexthestampede
trainspotting

:Skeptical

really?

mirrar
08-05-2005, 01:30 PM
Originally posted by ShotFullOfDiamonds


:Skeptical

really? my best friend has never seen this. i only found out recently and haven't got around to lending him my dvd because i'm living out of boxes.

alexthestampede
08-05-2005, 01:40 PM
^
shes talking about me

Sammiches
08-05-2005, 02:24 PM
Howl's Moving Castle
Charlie
Tarnation
Palindromes

ChristHimself!
08-05-2005, 02:25 PM
Begbie is pretty much one of the most classic characters in any movie, ever.

edit:

on topic (for a change);

the godfather trilogy (yes, i love movies and i see tons and i've never seen them!!! NEVER!! WHATCHA GONNA DO ABOUT THAT?!?!?!!!)

Casino (I've only seen wee bits of it)

The Machinist (on order from blockbuster)

Blood Simple (I have it right now, just not had a chance to watch it yet)

Harold and Kumar Get The Munchies (visit white castle in US)

The Skeleton Key

Don't look now

Throne Of Blood

The Deerhunter

any bob hoskins movie I haven't seen.. especially heart condition cause he looks hot on the poster...or for that matter any bob hoskins movie, even if I have seen it.

super nintendo
08-05-2005, 02:26 PM
Originally posted by Sammiches
Howl's Moving Castle
Charlie
Tarnation
Palindromes

>_<

DeadSwan
08-05-2005, 02:29 PM
Originally posted by Sammiches
Howl's Moving Castle
Charlie
Tarnation
Palindromes

i've seen howl's. what is charlie?

i'd also like to see tarnation and palindromes

Sammiches
08-05-2005, 02:29 PM
Originally posted by DeadSwan


i've seen howl's. what is charlie?

i'd also like to see tarnation and palindromes

Oh you know. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.

super nintendo
08-05-2005, 02:30 PM
Originally posted by Sammiches


Oh you know. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.

:rofl:

DeadSwan
08-05-2005, 02:30 PM
Originally posted by Sammiches


Oh you know. Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.

oooooh. yeah. duh.

Sammiches
08-05-2005, 02:46 PM
I still want to see À bout de souffle but when I went to pick it up it was the remake with Richard Gere :eek:

Sean sean let me borrow yoursss

HorseflyKing
08-05-2005, 02:52 PM
Originally posted by ShotFullOfDiamonds

The Machinist (on order from blockbuster)

It's good.
But not as good as I hoped it would be...
Christian Bale is bad-ass.

homechicago
08-05-2005, 03:01 PM
dukes of hazzard


i don't want to learn anything this weekend, and i'm confident this movie won't teach me anything.


next weekend i'll see duma.

Voice Implodes
08-05-2005, 03:37 PM
t;, dr.

but i want to see wedding crashers.

twice
08-05-2005, 05:29 PM
Originally posted by DeadSwan
2046

good luck finding it.

* Landmark Sunshine Cinema (New York,NY)
* Edwards University Town Center 6 (Irvine,CA)
* Nuart Theatre (Los Angeles,CA)
* Lincoln Plaza Cinemas (New York,NY)


that is unless you're living around these locations or something.

http://www.cinema.com/image_lib/9250_001.jpg
http://www.cinema.com/image_lib/9250_023.jpg
http://www.cinema.com/image_lib/9250_021.jpg
http://www.cinema.com/image_lib/9250_016.jpg
http://www.cinema.com/image_lib/9250_011.jpg
http://www.cinema.com/image_lib/9250_004.jpg/
http://www.cinema.com/image_lib/9250_003.jpg

beeeeeautiful. i wish i had the chance. :/

noir cat
08-05-2005, 05:32 PM
All these animes.

DeadSwan
08-05-2005, 05:34 PM
goddamn, it's not playing here! wtf


why did i leave nyc?

Nimrod's Son
08-05-2005, 05:48 PM
i want to see a remake of Monster with Charlize Theron and Christina Ricci where they play up the lesbian part and don't use unflattering makeup

Also minimum rating should be NC-17

dreamsofdali
08-05-2005, 05:54 PM
Originally posted by ShotFullOfDiamonds

The Deerhunter



Good luck with that

Oblivious
08-05-2005, 09:57 PM
march of the penguins

too bad it's not playing here.

spa ced
08-06-2005, 01:56 AM
Originally posted by Oblivious
march of the penguins


i want to see that too. and it is playing here. my friend is taking me to go see "me and you and everyone we know" tomorrow. i know nothing about this movie.

Dead
08-06-2005, 03:03 AM
Serenity, that new one Corpse Bride something, and I don't know what else.

murgle
08-06-2005, 07:05 AM
Originally posted by Oblivious
march of the penguins


aww yay. i wannna see that. i love penguins

morphinebitch
08-06-2005, 10:14 AM
charlie and the chocolate factory
the devil's rejects
corpse bride

Sammiches
08-06-2005, 11:02 PM
Originally posted by DeadSwan
2046



You can download it if you're into that. I think my boyfriend found a torrent.

daydreamer999
08-06-2005, 11:17 PM
sin city

patrick
08-06-2005, 11:20 PM
hey meghan remember when we were at amoeba and i was showing you the DVD for "in the mood for love" and you brushed me off and said you didn't care

why do you so suddenly have an interest in seeing its sequel?

neopryn
08-06-2005, 11:24 PM
Originally posted by daydreamer999
sin city yeah i didn't see this in theaters, the dvd is coming out soon.

daydreamer999
08-07-2005, 12:39 AM
it just came to the theater in noo zeeland, apparently it's 'the next pulp fiction'

DeadSwan
08-07-2005, 11:04 PM
Originally posted by patrick
hey meghan remember when we were at amoeba and i was showing you the DVD for "in the mood for love" and you brushed me off and said you didn't care

why do you so suddenly have an interest in seeing its sequel?


why don't you STFU?

Fonzie
08-08-2005, 01:06 AM
Salò (http://www.sensesofcinema.com/contents/00/4/salo.html)

You guys would love it.

Fonzie
08-08-2005, 01:07 AM
Originally posted by daydreamer999
it just came to the theater in noo zeeland, apparently it's 'the next pulp fiction'

I saw it Saturday night @ home - Mickey Rourke r00ls in it.

cynamonhill
08-08-2005, 01:51 AM
Originally posted by Fonzie
Salò (http://www.sensesofcinema.com/contents/00/4/salo.html)

You guys would love it.

Fonzie, did you see 'Salo' when it screened here years ago? Hurrah for NZ's liberal film laws aye!
However I did not get to see it and to be honest I do not know if I could get through this film. Friends with very open minds walked out on it when they saw it at (I believe?) the Incrediably Strange Film Festival.

Secondly, can you please give us a personal review, I would be interested in hearing people thoughts on it.

cheers,
x.cyn

Fonzie
08-08-2005, 03:53 AM
Originally posted by cynamonhill


Fonzie, did you see 'Salo' when it screened here years ago? Hurrah for NZ's liberal film laws aye!
However I did not get to see it and to be honest I do not know if I could get through this film. Friends with very open minds walked out on it when they saw it at (I believe?) the Incrediably Strange Film Festival.

Secondly, can you please give us a personal review, I would be interested in hearing people thoughts on it.

cheers,
x.cyn

1. It's available from Video Ezy on Ponsonby Road.
2. It's fucked. It's almost too weird for it's own good. Strike that - it is too weird for it's own good, but I couldn't walk out of it - it was on in my lounge.