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In
Mandarin With English Subtitles
Genre: Drama
Director: Hou Hsiao Hsien
Starring: Shu Qi, Chang Chen
RunTime: 2 hrs 10 mins
Released By: The Picturehouse
Rating: NC16 (Some Content Unsuitable For
Children)
Release
Date: 30 March 2006
Synopsis
:
Formerly
titled "The Best of Our Times" this is told as three
love stories, each set in a different era - a 1966 pool hall,
a 1911 brothel and present day Taipei. Each story evoking
a sentomental tale of unfinished love, starring Shu Qi and
Chang Chen as the lovers in each of
the decades.
Movie
Review:
Taiwanese auteur Hou Hsiao-Hsien's movie at The Picturehouse
is a movie with three stories told very distinctly, one story
after another. Take it as three short films rolled into one,
with each actor playing different roles, each character having
no distinct relation to their counterparts in different eras.
Having them set in 1966, 1911 and 2005 provided vastly different
material for each short film to stand out from one another.
The first,
"A Time for Love", is set in the swinging 60s of
1966. Chang Chen plays an army enlistee who chances upon Shu
Qi's working girl in a billiard parlour. He gets attracted
to her, but she, not being a permanent staff, flits from one
town to another. Undetered, he spends the weekend off to hunt
for her, starting from KaoShiung where they last met, following
a trail of different mailing addresses which takes him all
over Taiwan. This short plays out like a bittersweet tale
of budding love, where one will spare no effort in wanting
to meet the girl of one's dreams.
The second,
"A Time for Freedom", however, is a tough one to
swallow. Set during 1911, there is colour, but alas, there's
no audible dialogue save for opera lyrics sung and Chinese
classical music to set the stage. It plays out as a silent
movie of sorts, and the dialogue pieces are set in intertitles
which you have to read off to understand what the heck they're
saying. Very stylish way to portray the era, one which attracted
some snickering from the audience, but soon after, you'll
have to get very used to the way this section gets presented.
The story however, is nothing to shout about, and perhaps
the most boring of the lot. Very easy to doze off in the Oscar
chair I tell you.
The last
section, "A Time for Youth" is set in 2005. Chang
Chen plays a photographer, and Shu Qi, a bisexual Goth chick
who is on the road to becoming straight, I think. Her character
here is the most interesting of the lot, and also because
Chang Chen's male leads in all three parts were somewhat ordinary,
without an edge. While the first part's environment was in
Taiwan's rural areas, which is probably used as it's easier
to simulate the retro environment of the past, and the second's
highly likely in a soundstage, this one is familiar urban
territory - capital Taipei. It probably is hip to feature
lesbians in movies these days, as we see Shu Qi grapple with
a clingy lesbian lover. But after having passionate throngs
with Chang's character, I guess she must be having second
thoughts, or really, is bothered by the clinginess.
Throughout
the three sections, dialogue is quite scarce, except for perhaps
the first one. Peppered most of the time in Hokkien, it was
peculiar that the subtitles only had the Mandarin translation,
totally neglecting English speaking folks. But for the Mandarin
dialogue, there was English subtitles. So for those who don't
read Mandarin or understand oral Taiwanese styled Hokkien,
be prepared to be lost for a bit during the movie.
I didn't
manage to tie down the inter-related themes of all 3 parts,
except for the obvious one on love. The first, being in the
60s, was portrayed quite innocently, with shy smiles and little
surprises and all. The second was more restrained in nature.
Fact is, there's very little physical contact between the
lovers. While the third opened with sex, which I suspect was
snipped off here (didn't see what was in the trailers :P).
All three had appropriate music to accentuate the era's mood.
You have classics like Smoke Gets In Your Eyes, and Rain and
Tears (the one used in the trailer), up against Operatic music,
before closing the film with alternative music, sung in heavily
Chinese accented English, whose lyrics don't make much sense,
being adapted by Shu Qi's character encounters. Communication
techniques used in the three movies were as accurate as can
be, with A4 sized pen-written love letters, in contrast with
ink-brushed wordings in large thin paper, and today's prevalent
electronic communication with email and SMS. Perhaps it also
serves to highlight the idea of love in those eras. One very
innocent, one very plain, and one, non-permanent and fleeting.
Maybe
it's just me, but having watch three very arty representations
by directors such as Malick, Retaruang and now Hou, made me
a little jaded what with having movies where style takes precedence
over substance. I think I need to chill out with something
as mindless as Ice Age 2 or Ultraviolet soon. Need balance.
Movie
Rating:
  
Review
by Stefan Shih
(A Nutshell
Review - Probably Singapore's #1 Movie Review Blog)
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