In
The Mood For Love Movie Review:
Years
ago when I would lament over my perpetual status as an unmitigatingly
unattached individual, I often wondered why some people
seemed destined to end up single while others could go from
relationship to relationship with stunning ease until they
found their one and only true love. Did the lucky ones have
some special endearing character trait? Were they merely
better looking? Later I came to the realization that perhaps
the answer rested within the lamenter. Maybe those who consistently
find themselves alone possess an unmatched skill in talking
themselves out of true happiness. At least, I came to believe
that was my problem.
My
reason for bringing this up isn't to bore you with unwanted
insight into Michael Brendan's disasters in the quest for
emotional consummation, but to draw my own conclusions regarding
the characters in Kar-Wai Wong's "In the Mood for Love."
The two main players in this sad tale of unrealized happiness
are both victims of spousal infidelity, yet the emotional
anguish thrust upon them isn't nearly as debilitating as
the anguish they inflict upon themselves by not following
through on their feelings toward one other.
Now,
uptight morality mongers may question the integrity of the
previous statement, and perhaps they're right. Remaining
obstinate to a strict code of anti-lascivious morals may
indeed make them better human beings. It would most assuredly
make them unhappier ones.
The
setting is Hong Kong in 1962. The story takes place inside
a close-quartered apartment building bustling with people
eager to rent the last two rooms available. Chow Mo-Wan
(Tony Leung) and his wife move into the apartment next door
to Su Li-Zhen (Maggie Cheung) and her husband. Chow is a
hard-working journalist who houses dreams of writing and
publishing martial-arts novels, while Su works as a secretary
for a shipping company. There is an immediate attraction
between the two, yet neither acknowledges it for obvious
reasons. But when both individuals begin to suspect that
their respective spouses may be having an affair of their
own, they slowly break down the barriers of communication
and become friends ... or at least strangers who happen
to be on the same parallel journey.
At
times, they do discuss the bearing of their respective situations,
yet do so in a curiously detached, third-person sort of
way. (They even do some role-playing in an effort to practice
their responses upon being told of the affair.) Both are
aware of their growing love for each other, yet neither
is poised enough to acknowledge it. Finally, she asks Chow
how he is able to manage, to which he tells her there's
no point in brooding over it - a response that is not only
dishonest, but one that elicits pity more than respect,
showing a false inability on his part to love completely.
They continue to find excuses for not coming together, including
the fear of possible gossip. (Although with their spouses
having an affair, the point seems a bit moot. If that bomb
hasn't already detonated, it is certainly approaching its
final tick.)
The
most interesting thing about "In the Mood for Love" isn't
the story or the characters, but the visual technique utilized
by Kar-Wai Wong in telling it. First, the characters of
the two spouses engaged in the affair are never seen. Wong
is far more fascinated with the possibility of the two cheated-on
spouses finding true love in each other's embrace then how
the two marriages will be affected. Showing their faces
would have needlessly complicated the story.
I
also admired Wong's skillful utilization of foreground and
background planes, especially in the first half-hour when
they are becoming suspicious of their spouses' infidelity.
While making inquiries via phone calls or apartment attendants,
the characters of Chow and Su are shot in a way that conceals
the second person in the conversation. It's a brilliant
visual technique; another way of pushing the audience's
attention toward their intertwining situations rather than
mulling over each one's serparate dilemma.
Wong's
marvelous artistic style culminates into a final series
of shots that, coupled with Mike Galasso's haunting musical
score, seem to echo the deepest longings of the human soul.
The story is unquestionably sad, as are many developments
through one's own life. Rarely however, is it recreated
with such unfathomable, heartbreaking beauty.
Copyright
2001
Michael Brendan McLarney
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