Showing posts with label faye wong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label faye wong. Show all posts

Friday, January 14, 2011

2046


Originally Written and Posted at Epinions.com on 5/25/06 w/ Additional Edits.


2000's In the Mood for Love by Hong Kong director Wong Kar-Wai brought him his biggest success internationally. Notably for its visual flair and unconventional approach to storytelling. Even his style of directing on set and last-minute additions before the film was released gave him a reputation that is considered legendary. After doing some work including commercials and a short film segment for the omnibus film series Eros with Steven Soderbergh and Michelangelo Antonioni, Kar-Wai returned to work on an unlikely venture. A sequel of sorts to In the Mood for Love taking Tony Leung Chui-Wai's character of Mr. Chow into a series of surreal affairs in the future in a room number for the film's title called 2046.

Written and directed by Wong Kar-Wai, 2046 is a film about Mr. Chow's post life after his affair with Su Li-Zhen where embarks on a series of strange affairs while telling erotic stories set in the year 2046 in a time when people are trying to recapture lost memories on a train. More ambitious in its visual style and storylines than its predecessor, 2046 reveals more of Kar-Wai's unconventional approach to storytelling. With a cast that includes such regulars as Tony Leung Chui-Wai, Faye Wong, and Maggie Cheung plus Zhang Ziyi, Gong Li, Takuya Kimura, and Lam Siu-Ping. 2046 is another of Wong Kar-Wai's enduring films that stimulates not in its visual beauty but its heartbreaking take on love.

The year 2046 in Hong Kong is very different as the trains of 2046 are for people trying to recapture the lost memories through its varied rooms and androids. On the train is a Japanese man named Tak (Takaya Kimura) is trying to persuade an android (Faye Wong) to revisit a lost memory. That trip to revisit a time is a part of fiction as Chow Mo-wan (Tony Leung Chui-Wai) is reeling from the break-up with his lost love Su Li Zhen (Maggie Cheung) during a trip in Singapore. He along with his friend Ah Ping (Lam Sui-Ping), they return to Hong Kong in 1967, amidst its chaotic period in politics. Returning to give up his reporter job to become a consultant, Chow has become a womanizer of sorts as he comes across a woman named Lulu (Carina Lau). After a night with her, he walks out of her room where he recognizes the number 2046, a old hotel room number he stayed in from his lost affair. Turning to his hotel landlord Mr. Wang (Wang Sum), he moves into the room next door known as 2047 while room 2046 is being redecorated.

The series of affairs and one-night stands inspired Chow to write a series of erotic stories for the paper about a futuristic time in Hong Kong in the year 2046 where people go on trains with androids to reclaim lost memories. Just as the room was finished, a hooker named Bai Ling (Zhang Ziyi) moves in as he's become infatuated with her beauty. It's Christmas 1967 as the two would have dinner that eventually began as a secret affair. While Chow enjoys her company, he doesn't adore and only uses her for his stories as their relationship begins to heat up. Then when Bai Ling realizes the kind of man that Chow really is, their relationship falters. Chow would only see her in passing as he continues his un-fulfilling yet inspiring lifestyle.

Often infatuated with Mr. Wang's daughter Wang Jingwen (Faye Wong), he sees her again who still has trouble trying to contact her Japanese boyfriend (Takaya Kimura) through letters as her father still has bad blood with the Japanese over World War II. Chow becomes an unlikely correspondence through the letters as he begins a relationship with Wang Jingwen who helps him write his work after being impressed with her own writing. During a Christmas dinner, she feels hopeless that she'll never speak to her boyfriend as Chow gives a chance to call him where he decides to use them into another story. Suddenly, the tone of the story changes as he tells the story of Tak who falls for an android with a delayed response where he tells a secret through a hole.

The haunting elements of his stories forces Chow to give up his womanizing lifestyle as by 1970, he becomes reacquainted with Bai Ling, who is set to depart to Singapore. Chow tells about his time in Singapore including what happened last Christmas where he met a mysterious woman named Black Spider (Gong Li) who nearly resembles and carries the name of his lost love. For Chow, he has to recall his own memories as his own world of fiction and reality becomes blurry where he's trying to figure himself even more and the people around him.

While 2046 is not as simple as its predecessor, In the Mood for Love. The film does have a more complex approach in telling the story of Mr. Chow. Particularly in his development from this sensitive, quiet man in the preceding film, In the Mood for Love to a gloomier, meaner individual in 2046. In many ways, the film is about a man whose emotions towards rejection makes him colder yet the pain is drawn out in fiction as he becomes more withdrawn in all of these relationships he had with other women. It's in Wong Kar-Wai's story that really reveals the melancholia of love and all of its heartbreak, whether its in the 1960s or in the futuristic setting of 2046. The film just doesn't take those romantic from his previous film but also bringing a character from another Kar-Wai film, Days of Being Wild.

It's not just in Kar-Wai's script, or lack thereof since he never works with a script, that reveals a far more complex plot that blurs the idea of reality and fiction. It's in his direction where he's a master of atmosphere and tone. Using wandering images plus a very surreal look of 2046 Hong Kong where the trains are used for time travel, Kar-Wai goes very deep into the concept of loss and isolation. Fortunately in his script, he manages to take a structure where the audience isn't loss on what's going on or where they are. It's in Kar-Wai's direction that the audience is transported into a world of melancholia and emptiness where it's in Mr. Chow's journey of self-discovery. Even in Kar-Wai's presentation of mood and colors, he takes the audience to a world where things are moving a bit slower as opposed to the fast-paced world of the future while everything is lost. Kar-Wai's concept of the future is very bleak despite its look while the train and androids represent everything that people hold dearly. There, the ending of his previous film is clearly more understood while the ending in this film, shows a development of Mr. Chow and his trying to understand the way love and fate works.

Helping Kar-Wai in his unique, colorful presentation are two of his most enduring collaborators, Australian cinematographer Christopher Doyle and jacks-of-all-trade William Chang Suk Ping. In the photography, Doyle along with Lai Yiu Fai and Kwan Pun Leung create an enormous array of colors and settings of many of the film's interiors of the 1960s sequences where it's similar to the look of In the Mood for Love but only with a decaying feel. The cinematography in those sequences reveal the changing times while showing the atmosphere and withdrawn feel of the characters. In the 2046 section, it's more colorful with its shade of red and white lights to convey the sense of emotions and the lack of emotions in its androids. Truly its some of the best cinematography ever done.

Production designer/costume designer/editor William Chang Suk Ping helps creating the distinctive visuals of the film. With art director Alfred Yau Wai Ming, the film's 1960 look of colors and props reveal the changing times of late 1960s Hong Kong and the dingy look of late 1960s Singapore. It's in the atmosphere of the 1960s look where it represents the gloomy mood of Mr. Chow while the look of 2046 is very different and very polished. Even the costumes of the 1960s from the tight clothing of Bai Ling to the more conservative look of Wang Jingwen reveal the contrasts of their personalities while the costumes of the future are done with an array of things including paper mache. The film's look in its design and costume are done with immense brilliance while Chang's best work is clearly in the editing. Using a shimmering pacing style for some of the film's sequences, it doesn't move too slow or too fast but conveys the ever-decaying mood of Mr. Chow. It's wonderfully cut to convey the perspective of characters while holding together its unique yet complex structure. Overall, William Chang Suk Ping's work in any medium should be commended.

The visual effects team of BUF from France does a great job for creating a surreal yet gargantuan look of Hong Kong in the future. The film's look in its visual effects complement the style of Kar Wai and his collaborators where it presents a surreal yet beautiful look of the future filled with large buildings with neon colors and a green-brown background with everything looking what the future should look like. For the sound work, Kar-Wai regular Tu Duu Chih and French sound designer Claude Letessier do amazing work in bringing the right kind of feel and tone for its atmosphere from the quietness in the hotel rooms of the 1960s sequences to the metallic yet ominous feel of the 2046 scenes.

The film's music which is composed by Peer Raben and Shigeru Umebayashi is more sweeping and epic than In the Mood for Love which had a more waltz-like tempo in its score. For this film, the music conveys the sense of gloom and loss where its arrangements are more lyrical as it builds up the momentum of the film. The music also features not just cuts from Polish composer Zbigniew Preisner, famed for his work with the late Krzysztof Kieslowski, but also Georges Delerue, and pop cuts from Secret Garden, Angela Gheorghiu, Xavier Cugat, Connie Francis, and Nat King Cole singing a Christmas classic.

Finally, there's the film's cast which includes several notable small performances from Dong Jie as Wang Jingwen’s little sister and as an android plus Carina Lau reprising her role as Mimi/Lulu from Days of Being Wild and as an android along with Kar-Wai regular Chang Chen as her lover in both the 1960s and futuristic sequences. Maggie Cheung is also great in her brief appearance as the Su Li Zhen in the early 1966 sequence while Lam Sui-Ping is wonderfully funny as Ah Ping who reminds everyone of his humorous presence. Wang Sum is also excellent in his role as the Japanese-hating Mr. Wang while Gong Li commands a great presence and atmosphere in her performance as Black Spider who carries a secret past that becomes one of the film's most devastating moments. Japanese actor Takuya Kimura is wonderful in his role as Tak, a fictional character who represents all the remorse and sadness of Mr. Chow as he brings a mostly, minimalist performance to many of his scenes where it's truly a marvel of a performance.

Zhang Ziyi is great in her role as the young, emotional hooker Bai Ling who commands a great presence and authority to her role in many of the film's sequences as her character develops into a young woman who longs for the love of Mr. Chow. It's truly one of Ziyi's great performances. Faye Wong delivers the best of the female performances as Wang Jingwen who captures the heart of Mr. Chow through her sadness to connect with her own lost love. Though, the two never got into a more intimate relationship, Wong manages to capture the sense of hopefulness and will for Mr. Chow to re-think his own lifestyle while Wong also brings a wonderfully haunting yet emotional quality to her role as the android who is devoid of emotions.

Then we have Tony Leung Chui-Wai in the role of Mr. Chow. Taking his character to more darker yet withdrawn areas, Leung manages to create a different version of Mr. Chow that was opposed to the sensitive yet quiet man from In the Mood for Love. In 2046, he displays a lot of charm in front of everyone but inside, he's gloomier and meaner. Still, Leung manages to make Mr. Chow a man who is flawed and with a lot of internal conflict of someone who gives up on long love yet cannot yearn for it. Looking more like a modern-day, Asian Clark Gable, Leung brings new dimensions to his famed character as it stands out as another of his great performances.

The Region 1 DVD from Sony Pictures Classic is a truly marvelous DVD with loads of special features and a presentation that works for Kar-Wai's visually haunting film. The first film of Kar-Wai to be shot on a widescreen format of 2:40:1 anamorphic ratio. The look of the film is wonderful while it's done in 5.1 Dolby Digital sound in Cantonese with English and Spanish subtitles. Overall, the film looks and sounds great in its DVD presentation while it also features an array of great little extras. First is a 37-minute Behind the Scenes special featuring interviews with Kar-Wai and the cast where they talk about the film, Kar-Wai's style and the collaborators, notably William Chang Suk Pin about the look and feel of the costumes. The special is informative about Kar-Wai's working habits as they go behind the scenes on everything.

Two deleted scenes are presented except a much-talked about martial arts sequence that possibly never made the final cut or was never filmed. The first is a scene involving Black Spider trying to find Mr. Chow in his room as she ends up staying in the room 2046. The second deleted scene involves another strange meeting with Mr. Chow with meeting of Wang Jingwen's android character from their own collaboration which is one of the more emotional scenes. An alternate ending is also shown which shows Mr. Chow sitting in a bar, though it blurs things even more about the film's ending. The 16-minute interview featurette from a French TV program features interviews with Wong Kar-Wai and Tony Leung as they spoke in English where they talked about the film's concept and their own relationship into working. Zhang Ziyi speaks in Cantonese as she talks about her insecurities into working with Kar-Wai only to be helped by Leung where she found her niche into working with Kar-Wai. The interview also reveals Kar-Wai's non-script approach and how the actors got the freedom to interpret their own characters where for Ziyi, it was challenging yet fun.

The five-minute little featurette called Anatomy of Memories is about the making-of the visual effects of 2046 Hong Kong and the process it took from late 2003 through 2004 where a line-test was revealed in the film's premiere at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival. The film revealed in Kar-Wai's presentation and how he wanted Hong Kong to be bigger with large skyscrapers, smog, and have a neon, techno-like color with the help of his collaborator William Chang Suk Pin. The seven-minute Music Montage special is a collection of scenes played through a few pieces of the film's music, notably its opera track to convey the emotions that Kar-Wai wanted for the film. The featurette on the film's music is a collection of liner notes with the film being played to the clip of the music where that scene is in as Kar-Wai often borrows some of its music from the films of Rainer Werner Fassbinder and Krzysztof Kieslowski.

Two more little specials arrive where the first is in a numerology section about the card numbers, the money that Mr. Chow is paid, and the significance of the number 2046 where it's the year Hong Kong will be under a full rule of China. The second is a gallery of the film's posters from all of the countries to revealed the varied countries and looks of the posters for that country. The previews section from Sony Classics features trailers for such films as Thumbsucker, Junebug, Layer Cake, Heights, and Ingmar Bergman's Saraband. Overall, Sony Classics created a wonderful DVD that complements all the energy and creativity of Wong Kar-Wai.

When production began in 2001 for 2046, Kar-Wai's notoriety to shooting in long periods of time with lots of improvisation and last-minute changes made it a long shoot. There was a running joke on the set that the film would be released in the year 2046. Still, despite a two-year shoot which was nearly halted by the SARs epidemic, Kar-Wai still manage to finish production. During production, he embarked on a few other projects on the side that included his short for The Hand in the 2004 omnibus feature Eros with Michelangelo Antonioni and Steven Soderbergh; the BMW commercial short called The Follow with Clive Owen, Forrest Whitaker, Mickey Rourke, and model Adriana Lima; and a music video for the song Six Days for DJ Shadow.

By late 2003, Kar-Wai and the BUF visual effects team along with William Chang Suk Pin spent months trying to work on the editing and visual effects for the film. Though it was submitted and set for a world premiere, at the 2004 Cannes Film Festival. The film remained unfinished as on the date it was set to premiere and in competition for the Palme D'or, the film print arrived out of its laboratory three hours late as the date for the film had to be rescheduled. The unfinished film got mixed reviews though it wasn't the first time an unfinished film caused a lot of attention as Francis Ford Coppola released an unfinished of his 1979 masterpiece Apocalypse Now at the Cannes Film Festival and co-won the Palme D'or. Still, Kar-Wai manage to get the film done eventually in 2004 while his longtime cinematographer Christopher Doyle announced that 2046 would be the last time he would work with Kar-Wai. Despite Kar-Wai's notoriety in his work ethic, the film proved to be another success for its Hong Kong director.

Though not as potent or as simplistic as In the Mood for Love. 2046 is still an engrossing, hypnotic, and heartbreaking film from Wong Kar-Wai thanks to a dedicated film team and performances from Tony Leung Chui-Wai, Zhang Ziyi, Gong Li, Faye Wong, and Takuya Kimura. Though its suggested to watch In the Mood for Love for some back story, 2046 does manage to be its own film where it gives a great summary to not just the work of Kar-Wai but his unique take on love, memory, and the future. For a film that stimulates you on the visual sense and goes right into your heart, Wong Kar-Wai's 2046 is the film to see.


© thevoid99 2011

Thursday, January 13, 2011

Chungking Express


Originally Written and Posted at Epinions.com on 2/7/07 w/ Additional Edits.


Before such moody masterpieces like 2000's In the Mood for Love and 2004's 2046, Hong Kong director Wong Kar-Wai was just another filmmaker  from Hong Kong trying to get international attention. Earlier films like As Tears Go By and Days of Being Wild revealed an alternative to the fast-paced action of other Hong Kong films led by John Woo. Kar-Wai reveled more into mood and colorful visuals to convey stories of youth in the dark world of Hong Kong with elements of violence and romance. In 1994, Kar-Wai made his third feature that would give him a full-on international breakthrough including the attention of Asian film fan Quentin Tarantino for the film Chung Hing Sam Lam (Chungking Express).

Written and directed by Wong Kar-Wai, Chung Hing Sam Lam tells the story of two different romances with two policeman as one of them try to track down an assassin with a blonde wig. One of the cops falls for the mysterious woman while another is in love with a free-spirited diner cashier. A moody mediation on loneliness, Kar-Wai's crime drama reveals the atmospheric tone that would be set in later films while spinning a new take on the Hong Kong films of the time. Starring Brigitte Lin, Tony Leung Chui-Wai, Faye Wong, Takeshi Kaneshiro, and Valerie Chow. Chung Hing Sam Lam is a vibrant, colorful masterpiece from Wong-Kar Wai.

A mysterious woman (Brigitte Lin) in a blonde wig is walking through the slums of Hong Kong while a cop named Cop 223 aka Ah Wu (Takeshi Kaneshiro) is chasing a criminal where for a brief second, Ah Wu and the mysterious woman nearly bumped into each other. Within 57 hours, they would meet again. The woman is a part-time assassin and a smuggler as she with a group of Indians hoping to smuggle drugs through various products and things for them to sell out of Hong Kong. The only problem is that after the woman order the plane tickets, the Indians suddenly disappeared as she runs into new problems into finding them. Ah Wu meanwhile, is feeling heartsick after breaking up with May after a long relationship that lasted for a few years. Often hanging out at a local food counter, Ah Wu often talks with the manager (Chen Jinquan) about his love life where for nearly a month, Ah Wu's breakup with May had happened.

Taking an obsessive hobby in buying cans that were to be expired from April 1st to May 1st (which is his birthday), Ah Wu revels on his heartbreak while doing his duties as a cop. While the food counter manager suggests in going with an employee of his named May (Liang Zhen), Ah Wu doesn't want to. Mulling over everything that goes wrong, he goes to a bar where he sees the mysterious blonde woman. Thinking she wants company, she wants to be alone. Eventually, she gets tired as they stay at a hotel for the night with her in bed sleeping and Ah Wu watching TV and eating food. After that night, Ah Wu continues with his business while the blonde woman settles up some unfinished business.

Back in the food counter, May has now been replaced with a new girl named Faye (Faye Wong). Faye is a free-spirited young woman with a love for the Mamas & the Papas' song California Dreamin'. Ordering a chef salad at the counter is a beat cop known as Cop 663 (Tony Leung Chui-Wai). Faye is immediately attracted to the cop but he often talks to the manager about his stewardess girlfriend (Valerie Chow). The cop has broken up with his girlfriend where he's taken an obsession in buying chef salad and later, fish & chips through the suggestion of the manager. Then one day, the stewardess goes to the food counter to give the manager a letter. Everyone in the restaurant reads the letter including Faye who finds a key in the letter. Learning that the cop has now taken a new shift and beat, she sees him again while getting food for the restaurant. After a brief conversation and moment, Faye is falling for the cop where she has the key and decides to break into his apartment.

With the cop often obsessed with things in the apartment including towels and soaps, Faye decides to make some changes believing that his ex-girlfriend is there and making these radical changes to the apartment and stuff. The cop doesn't notice at first but then becomes suspicious. Then one day when the apartment was flooded, Faye appears where he becomes more suspicious as the cop wonders about his own love life and what Faye knows.

While the film does explore the world of loneliness and romance like other Kar-Wai films, the difference between this and latter-day films like In the Mood for Love and 2046 is in its energy and style. Originally supposed to be a three-segment story with the third being Fallen Angels, Chung Hing Sam Lam is a film about loneliness and lovesickness in all of its innocence and melancholia. More importantly, the film has a unique structure in its story. The first half of the film is a part crime-drama with a study of character in Ah Wu. The second half is a far more energetic, innocent love story that has a lot of quirks. Yet, the theme of loneliness is relevant in both stories where there's a balance in its story. In Kar-Wai's direction, the film is done with a lot of style both visually and cinematically. Especially in conveying moments of action and emotion through half-speeds and having the camera observing what's going on. The direction of Kar-Wai is exquisite and vibrant in every scene and frame. It also has a sense of improvisation where it feels real to the audience. Overall, it's a wonderful film filled with a lot of heart and spirit.

Longtime cinematographer Christopher Doyle along with Andrew Lau Wai-Keung  do amazing work in the film's visual presentation with its colorful photography. The shades of red, blue, green, and white are wonderful to convey the energy of the Hong Kong slums, especially in the Chungking mansions where it's filled with an array of different cultures. In the first half, the camera is mostly hand-held in some of the intense moments with a bit of grainy look to bring a sense of realism. In the second half, the look is more intimate and vibrant, including one beautiful shot involving candles. That sequence is the most breathtaking moment of the film. Longtime collaborator William Chang does excellent work in the art direction with Qiu Weiming to capture the look of the slums and counter where it looks like Hong Kong. Even the apartment of cop 663 (which is really the apartment of Christopher Doyle) is wonderfully decorated to bring the sense of energy. Chang's costume design also works with the blond wig that Brigitte Lin wears to the small t-shirts and youthful clothing that Faye Wong wears.

Chang along with editors Kit-Wai Kai and Chi-Leung Kwong bring a lot of style to the editing. The film has a great rhythm with its use of jump-cuts and half-frame speeds to convey the sense of action and emotion. The editing is superb in every way as Chang and his team do amazing work. Music composer Frankie Chan, Michael Galasso, and Roel A. Garcia create a score that's a bit suspenseful in the first half with ominous arrangements along with moments of sadness to convey the loneliness of the blonde woman and Ah Wu. The rest of the music is filled with a reggae song in the film's first half while the second half is largely dominated by the Mamas & the Papas' California Dreamin' which will never be heard the same way again. The rest of the soundtrack includes a couple of covers by Faye Wong, one is a cover of a Cocteau Twins song and the other is a cover of Dreams by the Cranberries that is wonderful.

The film’s cast features brief appearances from Liang Zhen as the second May and Valerie Chow as the cop 663's ex-girlfriend stewardess. Chen Jinquan is excellent as the food counter manager who tries to help the situations of the two cops with their girlfriends while dealing with the usual problems with his restaurant. Takeshi Kaneshiro is great as the lovesick, naive Cop 223 who tries to figure out about his own heartbreak and attempt to go into other relationships. Brigitte Lin is great as the mysterious blonde woman by sporting a blonde wig and sunglasses in which, she doesn't show her eyes and real hair. Lin is great for bringing a lot of mystique and ambiguity to a role where she’s a very bad woman and doesn't want to surround herself with anyone or anything. It's a great performance from the iconic actress. Tony Leung Chui-Wai is great as the quiet cop 663 whose obsessions towards food and objects surrounding his ex-girlfriend makes him a great foil of sorts for the Faye Wong character. Leung's understated performance is wonderful in dealing with the ideas of love and all of its hopes and disappointments.

Finally, there's Faye Wong in her feature-film debut as Faye. Wong's free-spirited energy and presence definitely lights up any scene she’s in. From the use of California Dreamin' and Dreams, there is something about Wong’s performance that is just breathtaking and a joy to watch. There's a quirky innocence and playfulness in Wong that is so natural and intoxicating, she's someone that a viewer can fall in love with. Especially in the same way someone like Natalie Portman in Garden State or Maggie Gyllenhaal in Secretary have which is indescribable. Wong has that intoxicating quality that makes anyone want to fall in love with her.

The Region 1 DVD from Miramax and Quentin Tarantino's defunct Rolling Thunder Pictures video label presents the film in its widescreen format ratio of 1:85:1 for 16x9 TVs with Dolby Digital Sound. The DVD includes two different trailers including the original Hong Kong trailer and U.S. trailer. The U.S. version of the film adds extra minutes and scenes with a few, slightly re-edited sequence that doesn't change much of the film. The DVD includes an introduction track from Quentin Tarantino who discusses his introduction to Kar-Wai after seeing his second feature Days of Being Wild. He enjoyed the film and saw Chung Hing Sam Lam at the Stockholm Film Festival in 1994 where Tarantino was also showing Pulp Fiction and fell in love with the film.

In the wrap-up after the film, Tarantino discusses why Kar-Wai made the film. After going through some exhausting problems in editing his martial arts epic Ashes of Time, Kar-Wai decided to do something different. For 23 days, he immediately made Chung Hing Sam Lam. Taking Kar-Wai regulars Tony Leung Chui-Wai and Brigitte Lin, Kar-Wai decided to do some the same improvisational style like one of his favorite directors, Jean-Luc Godard. Lin, who is considered the Greta Garbo of Hong Kong films, retired after doing Chung Hing Sam Lam. Tarantino briefly mentions Faye Wong, who is a popular pop singer in Asia and this was her film debut. Tarantino mentioned Fallen Angels which was supposed to be a third part of the film but Kar-Wai was already tired at the point of making the two stories that he decided to make the third story into a bigger feature-length film. After finishing it in 1994, Kar-Wai released both Chung Hing Sam Lam and Ashes of Time.

***Updated DVD Tidbits 10/11/09***

The 2008 Criterion Collection Region 1 DVD for Chungking Express presents the film in a new, restored high-definition digital transfer with Dolby Digital 5.1 sound which are all supervised by Wong Kar Wai. Presented in its original 1:66:1 aspect ratio in the widescreen format. The DVD includes two special features exclusively for the DVD. The first of which is a feature-length audio commentary track from Asian cinema critic Tony Rayns. The British-based critic reveals a lot about Kar Wai’s background plus his early film career. Particularly at where Kar Wai was at during the making of Chungking Express following the overwhelming difficulties and troubles he was going through making Ashes of Time.

Rayns also reveals tidbits on the production where the film's two different storylines were shot by different cinematographers. The Brigitte Lin/Takeshi Kaneshiro storyline was mostly shot by Andrew Lau Wai-keung, who would later forge a filmmaking career of his own with his most notable success being a co-director for Infernal Affairs. When Wai-keung had to leave production to start work on a film of his own, Kar Wai brought in Christopher Doyle whom he worked with on Kar Wai's second film Days of Being Wild despite a contentious relationship with the two. Rayns reveals the different between Wai-keung's approach in comparison to Doyle which would lead Doyle to become one of Kar Wai's regular collaborators until 2004's 2046 in which the two had a falling out after production of that film.

Rayns talks about Kar Wai's casting choices where the film’s still photographer Piggy Chan Kam-chuen ended up playing the Midnight Express food stand manager. For Brigitte Lin, this was her final film role before going into retirement to raise a family while Rayns delves Takeshi Kaneshiro multi-lingual background as he was just starting to act at this time since he was a pop singer. Rayns also goes into detail about Tony Leung Chiu-Wai's relationship with Kar Wai that began during the troubled production of Days of Being Wild along with directing Faye Wong who didn't have any dialogue early on because she felt tense during her performances. The overall commentary is informative and insightful about Kar Wai, the film, and the Asian film scene along with some details about Kar Wai's recent work and some reasons into why Kar Wai and Christopher Doyle will never work together again.

The second big special feature is a 13-minute clip from a 1996 British TV series called Moving Pictures which features interviews from Wong Kar Wai and Christopher Doyle. The film explores Kar Wai's film collection up to 1995's Fallen Angels as Kar Wai gives a tour of the Chungking mansion area where he based part of the film on. The apartment that Tony Leung Chiu-Wai's character stayed in is actually the apartment of Christopher Doyle which he reveals while was upset over the flooding and losing some things in nice humor. The two also talk about film aesthetics as it's an informative, fun little featurette about Kar Wai and Doyle. Another special feature that also appeared in the previous DVD version from Miramax and Quentin Tarantino's Rolling Thunders Pictures label is the trailer in a remastered form.

The DVD also includes a booklet featuring an essay by film critic Amy Taubin of Film Comment & Sight & Sounds. Entitled Electric Youth, Taubin compares the film to Jean-Luc Godard’s Masculin Feminin since both films featured popular singers of the time in leading roles. Taubin also goes into a bit of Kar Wai's career at the time following the troubled production of Ashes of Time as well as what was happening in Hong Kong three years before being handed back to China from Britain. Taubin goes in depth to the film's plot and characters while revealing that the film despite Quentin Tarantino's endorsement for the film, failed in the U.S. box office upon its 1996 release in that country. The overall essay is definitely a great read for those who love the film as the Criterion DVD itself is a more definitive version than the original Rolling Thunders DVD back in 2002.

***End of DVD Tidbits***

While it doesn't have the same elliptical, moody textures of latter-day films like In the Mood for Love or 2046, Chung Hing Sam Lam is still a vibrant, intoxicating masterpiece from the brilliant Wong Kar-Wai. Fans of Kar-Wai will no doubt consider this film as one of the essentials of his films. Those new to Kar-Wai will find this as a great starting point as well as a nice introduction to Hong Kong films that aren't action films. In the end, for anyone wanting to find a nice movie about love and all of its quirks and disappointment, Chung Hing Sam Lam is the film to see.


© thevoid99 2011