Hong Kong, 2000In the Mood for Love took a turbulent road to its completed form. Wong originally envisioned a film set in mainland China in the mid-20th century titled Summer in Beijing, to be a triptych of stories similar to his Chungking Express and Fallen Angels. Eventually he realized that shooting a film in China set during that time period would be too difficult because of vigilant Chinese censors, and relocated to Hong Kong, also narrowing his focus to only one story - a love story. In the Mood for Love took 15 months to shoot, an unusually lengthy production, especially for a film with such an intimate focus. Wong shot largely without a script, improvising, creating and re-creating the story as he went along. The post-production was, by all reports I've read, rushed and confusing, with the film barely completed in time for its premiere. Enough footage was cut out to have made an entirely different film, and perhaps a radically different one than the final product. For all the chaos of its creation, you'd expect In the Mood for Love to be haphazard or unfocused, if not an outright disaster - but it's not. Actually, In the Mood for Love is among the most controlled, elegantly composed films I've ever seen. Every shot and every edit is purposeful and beautiful, and contributes to a whole that is basically perfect.
Directed by Wong Kar-wai
Like Wong's earlier Days of Being Wild, In the Mood for Love takes place in 1960s Hong Kong. Two married couples, the Chows and the Chans, move into neighboring apartments on the same day. Separately, Mr. Chow (Tony Leung) and Mrs. Chan (Maggie Cheung) begin to suspect that their spouses are having an affair with each other. They form a tentative friendship, trying to figure out why they were betrayed by those closest to them, and finding some solace in a sympathetic confidant. Quickly it becomes clear that more feeling exists between them than just sympathy, but they both deny it and vow not to be like their cheating spouses. They find excuses to spend time together, Mrs. Chan helps Mr. Chow write the martial arts novel he's long dreamed of making. Though their relationship remains platonic, eventually they can no longer ignore their growing feelings and decide to stop seeing each other.
In the Mood for Love is maximalist in style but minimalist in its approach to character and story. There is little in the way of traditional plot development or exposition. We learn about the main characters from brief snatches of dialogue, their expressions and body language. Wong's films usually contain voiceover from the characters, communicating their stream of thoughts, but In the Mood for Love eschews any narration - we must guess what these people are thinking and how they feel, since they rarely communicate it directly. The characters of In the Mood for Love are often situated within doorways or windows, or partially obscured from the camera by walls or other people. I felt like I was spying on them, and even caught myself trying to peer around a corner to get a better glimpse (a sure sign that I was engaged by the film). Watching In the Mood for Love is trying to solve a mystery, where each gesture, each polite conversation is loaded with more meaning than is apparent on the surface. Wong's decision to position his characters within frames also expresses their entrapment - within marriages where they're been betrayed, within a society that is quick to gossip, and within themselves and their own principles, noble as they may be.
While Mr. Chow and Mrs. Chan don't express their feelings, the film does it for them. In the Mood for Love is gorgeously expressive. Shigeru Umebayashi's stirring strings score and Christopher Doyle's colorful cinematography communicate their yearning and their lovesickness. Mundane sequences, like Mrs. Chan going out for noodles, are made achingly beautiful through the music and camerawork. All of Wong's films are more musical than literary in their structure - they are built on repetitions and refrains instead of A-to-B plot developments - and in their impact, which is more emotional and visceral than intellectual. Wong has stated that if Chungking Express is pop music, than In the Mood for Love is chamber music - which seems a perfect comparison to me. It is simple, elegant, and melancholy.
While Mr. Chow and Mrs. Chan don't express their feelings, the film does it for them. In the Mood for Love is gorgeously expressive. Shigeru Umebayashi's stirring strings score and Christopher Doyle's colorful cinematography communicate their yearning and their lovesickness. Mundane sequences, like Mrs. Chan going out for noodles, are made achingly beautiful through the music and camerawork. All of Wong's films are more musical than literary in their structure - they are built on repetitions and refrains instead of A-to-B plot developments - and in their impact, which is more emotional and visceral than intellectual. Wong has stated that if Chungking Express is pop music, than In the Mood for Love is chamber music - which seems a perfect comparison to me. It is simple, elegant, and melancholy.
All this stunning artistry would have a hollow center if Mr. Chow and Mrs. Chan's relationship didn't work, but Tony Leung and Maggie Cheung have tremendous chemistry together. Their beauty is certainly a part of it - Tony Leung makes smoking look cool again, and watching Maggie Cheung sashay about in her various form-fitting dresses is mesmerizing. Both Leung and Cheung would have been terrific actors in the silent film era - they express great depth and subtlety with very little dialogue, mostly through their eyes and their posture.
Ultimately, In the Mood for Love is difficult to write about. Words don't really capture its hypnotic effect - this is a film whose power comes less from its ideas and more from how the music, the editing, the camerawork and the performances draw you into its mood, and into sympathy with two good-hearted but very private and very lonely people. I've seen it three times now, and each viewing has cast a spell on me, unbroken from beginning to end. It's a masterpiece of filmmaking, one of the very best films of the past 20 years.
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