Temptress
Moon Movie Review:
One
thing I've discovered about my viewing habits is that I
tend to like those films where a large part of the budget
has gone into the production value, and where the cinematography
presents a canvas stroked to ecstasy with every colour of
the palette. Chen Kaige's "Temptress Moon" is
one such film, where the costumes are impossibly crisp and
whiter than white, and where a single candle flame seems
imbued with the energy of a single nuclear reactor. It is
a film whose incandescent scenery are matched by the rather
convoluted soap opera-style plot, suffused and intoxicated
by opium, an allegory of the addiction and corruption of
all the characters within this film.
Leslie
Cheung is Zhongliang, a famous and much sought-after gigolo
working under the benevolence of a Shanghai crime boss who
treats him like a son. He seduces rich, bored and lonely
housewives who are then blackmailed into paying large sums
of hush money. He is then ordered to seduce and swindle
the mistress of the wealthy Pang family, Ruyi (Gong Li).
At first reluctant, he returns to face his past, for he
was once from this household, having being brought in to
be a servant by his sister, who was married to the eldest
son of this family. After some unspecified incident (which
hints at forced incest) he had run away, later to be picked
up by the Shanghai crime gang.
In this
world of old money, tradition and ritual, the exposure to
modern ideas, whether it comes in the form of the grown
up Zhongliang in his Westernized clothing, or Ruyi's rebellion,
in spite of her drug-addled condition, lays bare the rotten
core of the old ways, corrupt, inflexible and blind. However,
while Ruyi wants to escape to a better life, Zhongliang
comes like a hot wind of vengeful fury, seeking to destroy
everyone by manipulating emotions and humiliation like a
weapon. As usual with a film like this, tragedy greets every
wrong move, and the last angry act by Zhongliang serves
to condemn them all.
Although
there is some confusion about the reason, I think I can
see why this film ran into censorship trouble with the Chinese
censorship board. Still, the message is delivered in a very
roundabout, somewhat ambiguous and artsy-fartsy way. The
movie tends to move at the speed of maple syrup, accelerating
during moments of high intensity and emotion, which is almost
painful to watch. The plot's a little confusing, considering
that the motivation for the characters aren't immediately
apparent. Although I've said before that I like films that
have pretty visuals, I can see the flaws in this film. In
the end, one should just sit back and enjoy the Christopher
Doyle's cinematography, which creates a moody, dreamlike
atmosphere, charging everything with a sense of the dramatic.
Leslie Cheung carries off the role of the dandy very well,
a sort of feyness about him that is sensual and sexual
a bit queer actually, but it works. Gong Li's performance
is a diluted by the fact that she had to look like a complete
stoner most of the time, but her confusion sometimes works.
For those who stick with it though, this film does have
its rewards.
Eden
Law
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