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HAPPY TOGETHER
(HONG KONG )
NOVEMBER 2011
SYNOPSIS
This film from HK auteur Wong Kar-Wai is an elliptical, quicksilver
experiment and the film that cemented his international reputation
as one of the leading filmmakers of our time. Happy Together
is an exercise in emotional estrangement—from one’s lover,
one’s homeland, and oneself. Tony Leung Chiu-Wai and Leslie
Cheung are the lovers whose tumultuous relationship is a process
of breaking up and making up.
The two decide to start over in Buenos Aires, but true to form
their bickering dissolves their relationship. Never reaching
the waterfall they intended to visit in the first place, they
go their separate ways. Somehow they find themselves back together,
and the slow burn of their disintegrating love provides more
exploration into the lives of lost, lonely souls that is Wong
Kar-Wai’s never-ending obsession.
As is usual, there are no real answers provided by Wong's existential
musings. Happy Together is simply a journey, and an affecting
one. Eventually, what we find is reflection of where we belong,
where we find our home, and what happened along the way. Christopher
Doyle shoots the film in lovely shades of rich, lurid color.
Arty and existential to an almost maddening end, this film is
pure Wong Kar-Wai, which is equal parts longing, regret, and
pathetic beauty.
Maverick director Wong Kar-wai manages to pour
old wine into new jars with Happy Together a fizzy chamber yarn
about two gay Hong Kongers in Argentina that's as slim as a bamboo
flute but is his most linear and mature work for some time. Melding
the melancholia of his swordplay epic Ashes of Time with some
of the poppy visual and musical elements of Chung King Express,
Wong has come up with a distinctive third product that should
garner good critical response and perform well in select sites.
Pic is much more a general meditation on relationships than a
‘gay movie,’ though that element will be a useful extra arrow
in distribs' quivers when marketing this specialized item.
During its making, the movie underwent even more changes than
is normal for a Wong pic. The location shoot dragged on for four
months, from September to December last year, in difficult working
conditions; the original storyline was massively altered during
shooting; and characters and subplots were eliminated after the
original three-hour cut. Final result (with a reported tab of
$4.2 million) is one of Wong's most straightforward movies in
some time, pared back to concentrate on only three characters,
and as pure a piece of almost plotless, metaphysical cinema as
he's made in his career.
Major surprise is that what was widely pre-billed as a gay-themed
movie is only peripherally concerned with such matters. Though
the universe in which the main characters move is exclusively
male, the abstract feelings the movie evokes --- loss, regret,
love, hate, happiness --- are transfigured to a universal, sexually
neutral level. In many respects, that is the pic's greatest achievement.
In a move that's clearly designed to get the distracting sex
element out of the way, the movie starts with a moderately steamy
(but in no way explicit) bed scene between the two principals,
the serious Lai (Tony Leung Chiu-wai) and more flip Ho (Leslie
Cheung), in a grungy apartment. They're then shown arguing on
the road as they get lost on the way to the fabled Iguazu Falls
--- a spectacular, almost mystical location that serves as a
destination for spiritual renewal.
But at some unseen point, the pair break up; Lai works as a doorman
at a tango bar in Buenos Aires, and Ho as a hooker. Ho, however,
still wants to get back with Lai, and eventually Lai takes Ho
in when he arrives at his door one night, badly beaten up.
Movie switches from monochrome to colour at this point (some
25 minutes in), with Lai nursing Ho back to health but --- in
an engagingly funny sequence --- refusing to get back into a
sexual relationship. Lai has, however, hidden the self-destructive
Ho's passport, in an attempt to keep him around and out of trouble.
The interlude doesn't last long, with Ho getting antsy as soon
as he's better and Lai befriending a young, straight kid from
Taiwan, the innocent, idealistic Chang (Chang Chen). When Chang
leaves for Taipei, Lai is thrown back on the scrap heap of depression,
facing serious homesickness and the ongoing problem of what to
do with Ho.
All this is shown in a fractured but fairly easy to follow way
that draws a convincing portrait of Argentina as some kind of
upside-down version of Hong Kong where emotions, social norms
and relationships are topsy-turvy, with none of the safety nets
that exist back home. In the final, East Asian scenes, a powerful
sense of security and homecoming returns to the picture, mirroring
Lai's own feelings and amplified by the use of the Turtles' famous
title song --- as exhilarating as California Dreamin in Chung
King Express.
For a film that's as much based on a wisp of a plot as this,
the mise-en-scene is crucial, and Wong has wisely ditched the
frenetic, debilitating energy of his previous "Fallen Angels" in
favour of a more relaxed (though still edgy) style, taking his
cue for the mood from Argentina's lassitude and the melancholia
of its music. Astor Piazzolla's "Tango Apasionado" is
a fitting accompaniment to many of the stylized visuals, in which
pastels rather than primary colours dominate.
Perfs by both Leung and Cheung, both major H.K. stars, are good,
with the former consistently playing against the latter's bad-boy
persona, and both bringing a playfulness to the relationship
that stops the pic from miring in sexual politics. Taiwanese
thesp Chang (the lead in Edward Yang's "A Brighter Summer
Day") brings a blast of fresh air to the movie as Leung's
new-found friend.
The real star of the movie, however, is lenser Christopher Doyle
(in his fifth outing with Wong), whose grainy, high-contrast
visuals --- shot on 35mm but "forced" throughout ---
do much to keep the picture involving when the story is either
going round in elaborate circles or revisiting earlier ground.
Though there are some parallels to the visual style of "Chung
King" and "Angels," overall "Happy" has
its own, distinct look. It's fair to say this is an instance
in which the lenser is an equal partner with the director in
the finished picture.
Other tech credits are rich, especially William Chang's sleazy,
highly atmospheric production design. For consistency with the
use of other Frank Zappa numbers in the pic, Wong originally
wanted to use his version of "Happy Together," but
rights problems forced the helmer to rerecord the song in Hong
Kong. Producers are still considering minor trims to the movie,
including toning down the opening sex scene for some markets.
Chinese title, from poetry, literally means "Spring Brilliance
Suddenly Pours Out."
Source: Variety : www.variety.com Derek Elley May 24, 1997 [accessed
23/3/2011].
HAPPY TOGETHER
Hong Kong 1997
Cantonese
RT: 98mins
Director
Wang Jiawei (WONG Kar Wai)
Screenplay
Wang Jiawei (WONG Kar Wai)
Cinematographer
Du Kefeng (Christopher DOYLE)
Potential
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