By James Bowman on 5.15.07 @ 12:02AM
Desperate loneliness in Malaysia, glacially paced, yet set against a Mozartian backdrop.
Back in the go-go Sixties, it used to be thought that a moving
camera gave movies the hallmark of reality. The bobbing, hand-held
camera was what put the verite into cinema
verite, and it went mainstream with the invention of the
Steadicam in the 1970s. The works of Martin Scorsese are
unimaginable without it. But now that we see the moving camera as a
familiar feature even of such TV shows as The Office or
Lost, we've grown so used to this "real" look that it
doesn't look, well, quite real anymore. Now directors who strive to
give their films the look of authenticity are more likely to plant
a stationary camera with a wide-angle but deep focus shot and have
their actors wandering in and out of the unmoving frame in
enormously long takes -- sometimes while ambient, mostly off-camera
noise takes the place of dialogue. It's the reality of the
surveillance camera.
It's also tremendously boring, unless you've schooled yourself
into an appreciation of the style. If you have taken the trouble to
do that, Tsai Ming-Liang's I Don't Want to Sleep
Alone(Hei Yan Quan) may be the movie for you. Using
the above-mentioned techniques throughout, and with almost no
dialogue, Mr. Tsai -- whose previous films include What Time Is
It There? (2001) and The Wayward Cloud (2005) --
manages to tell quite a complex story of love and loneliness set in
Kuala Lumpur against the background of economic upheaval and
stagnation which followed the Asian economic crisis of the late
1990s. Complex, but not very interesting.
Set mostly in the unfinished and abandoned concrete shell of a
high-rise building whose subterranean storeys are filled with
rainwater, the film takes us into the demi-monde of
foreign guest-workers who came to Malaysia -- mostly from
Bangladesh and Indonesia -- in the boom times and stayed on
illegally after the crash, living a hand-to-mouth existence on the
streets or in improvised squats. Hsiao Kang (Lee Kang-Sheng), an
ethnic Chinese who apparently speaks no Malay, joins a crowd
surrounding a street huckster who is promising to sell people
winning lottery numbers. When he is found to have no money and to
be unable to speak their language, several of those in the crowd
beat him and leave him for dead.
He is found by a group of Bangladeshis who have scrounged an old
mattress somewhere and are taking it back to the squat of one of
them, Rwang (Norman Atun). They put Hsiao Kang on the mattress and
take him along with it back to Rwang's place. Rwang nurses him back
to health. The two young men sleep side by side on the mattress.
There are some hints that a sexual relationship develops between
them, but this is never made explicit. We are left to infer it,
mostly from Rwang's jealous reaction when Hsiao Kang, after
recovering from his injuries, engages in a sexual relationship with
a girl, Chyi (Chen Shiang-chyi), who has wandered in to their story
from the second of the film's two narrative strands.
In this, Mr. Lee plays another role, that of a young victim of
paralysis -- or perhaps catatonia -- lying in a hospital bed in the
main living area of his family's apartment above a tea-shop or cafe
run by his mother (Pearlly Chua). In several long takes, we watch
as his mother attends to his physical needs -- or as he just lies
there, immobile, while arias from Mozart's Magic Flute
play on a boom-box beside him. The Mozart is partly an
acknowledgment of the fact that the movie was commissioned by the
Mozart New Crowned Hope Festival of Vienna last year, but there are
also in the film what might be regarded as echoes of the opera's
plot -- in which a prince must undertake a quest to release (and
marry) a captive princess.
In this case, the captive princess is Chyi, who is a waitress in
the cafe. She sleeps in a tiny attic room immediately above the
paralyzed youth, whose bed she can see through the floorboards. His
mother, her employer -- presumably occupying the Queen of the Night
role (there doesn't seem to be any Sarastro) -- badly mistreats
Chyi, but she is in turn badly used by another son (Samantha Toh
Su-Yee) as he tries to sell the cafe out from under her. At one
point we see the Lady Boss anointing herself with some kind of
lotion and then turning to Chyi, in what at first seems a stray
gesture of kindness and humanity, and putting some of the lotion on
her hand. But then she drags the girl to the bed where her comatose
son lies and forces the now-lubricated hand down the front of his
diaper.
Like the vast, largely empty narrative spaces of the film or the
imposing ghost of economic prosperity in the form of the abandoned
high-rise, these are images of an almost desperate loneliness.
Eventually Chyi, Rwang and the Lady Boss all become rivals for the
romantic attentions of Hsiao Kang -- whose own passivity towards
the three of them rivals that of his alter ego, the paralyzed boy
dreaming of Mozartian romance. It's a basically comic scenario, and
a romantic scene between Hsiao Kang and Chyi, coughing and wheezing
through their improvised facemasks when a cloud of pollution
descends on the city, plays to this side of the film. So perhaps,
in its final scene, does the Mozartian sense of all-enveloping
forgiveness borrowed from The Marriage of Figaro rather
than The Magic Flute. But to get to it you have to come
equipped with enormous patience for the movie's own form of
paralysis and stagnation in the form of its immobility and glacial
pace.
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Movies