Venice
Lust, Caution
Se, Jie (Hong Kong-U.S.-China)
A Focus Features release (in U.S.) of a Haishang Films presentation, in
association with Focus Features, River Road Entertainment,
Sil-Metropole Organisation, Shanghai Film Group Corp. (International
sales: Focus Features Intl., London.) Produced by Bill Kong, Ang Lee,
James Schamus. Executive producers, Ren Zhonglun, Darren Shaw.
Co-producers, Doris Tse, David Lee. Directed by Ang Lee. Screenplay,
Wang Hui-ling, James Schamus, based on the short story by Eileen Chang.
With: Tony Leung Chiu-wai, Tang Wei, Joan Chen, Wang Leehom, Anupam Kher, Chu Tsz-ying.
(Mandarin, Cantonese, Shanghainese, English, Japanese dialogue)
Too much caution and too little lust squeeze much of the dramatic
juice out of Ang Lee's "Lust, Caution," a 2½--hour period drama that's
a long haul for relatively few returns. Adapted from a short story by
the late Eileen Chang, tale of a patriotic student -- who's willing
bait in a plot to assassinate a high-up Chinese collaborator in
Japanese-held WWII Shanghai -- is an immaculately played but largely
bloodless melodrama which takes an hour-and-a-half to even start
revving up its motor.
A handful of explicit sex scenes (in the
final act) have earned pic an NC-17 rating in the U.S., where it goes
out in limited release Sept. 28. But beyond the notoriety of a
Chinese-language picture with full-frontal female nudity, pic lacks the
deep-churning emotional currents that drove Lee's "Brokeback Mountain"
and his best other works. B.O. in the West looks to be modest, once the
initial ballyhoo has died down.
Story opens in Japanese-occupied
Shanghai in 1942, at the home of Yee (Hong Kong's Tony Leung Chiu-wai),
head of the secret service of the collaborationist Chinese government,
and his wife (Joan Chen). One of Mrs. Yee's mahjong partners, swapping
gossip over the tiles, is the much younger Mrs. Mak (Tang Wei), the
half-Cantonese, half-Shanghainese wife of a businessman who was
recently in Hong Kong.
As Yee returns from work and passes by the
mahjong table, it's clear there's something between him and Mak, though
neither one lets their façade slip. Later, Mak makes a coded phone call
to Kuang Yumin (U.S.-born pop star Wang Leehom), who says "the
operation can start."
After this lengthy 15-minute intro, largely
occupied by idle chatter around the mahjong table, the film flashes
back four years to Hong Kong to show who Mak really is: Wang Jiazhi, a
first-year university student whose family fled Hong Kong for the U.K.
Through her friend Lai (Chu Tsz-ying), Wang falls in with a patriotic,
anti-Japanese group that is mounting a play to fund their activities.
Leader
of the group is the passionate Kuang, who hears that Yee, a
high-ranking collaborator with the Japanese, is in Hong Kong on a
recruitment mission. Kuang hatches a plan in which Wang plays the
fictional Mrs. Mak and insinuates herself into Mrs. Yee's confidence.
But Mrs. Yee's cool, wily husband, though attracted to Wang, slips
through the net.
Cut to Shanghai, 1941 -- a year before the
opening timeframe -- and it's round two between Yee and Wang. After
Wang is rehired by the resistance to continue her Mrs. Mak role, this
time their liaison is far more full-on, and as lust raises its
sometimes violent head, it looks as if caution may be thrown to the
wind by one or both parties.
Both Leung and newcomer Tang --
whose characters are far more charismatic and attractive than in
Chang's original short story -- do strike some sparks, especially in
the sex scenes, which are very bold by Chinese standards. (A tamer
version will reportedly be released in mainland China.) But for most of
the film, the two dance around each other in conversations that don't
have much electricity or sense of repressed passion -- and vitally, no
sense of the real danger that Wang is courting in the game of
cat-and-mouse.
Moments of either grim wit (as in the messy
stabbing of a blackmailing traitor) or spry comedy (Wang getting rid of
her virginity to further the cause) occasionally vary pic's tone but
don't bolster the underlying drama.
Wartime Shanghai was far more
realistically drawn in Lou Ye's Zhang Ziyi starrer "Purple Butterfly,"
which also conveyed a stronger sense of resistance and collaborationist
politics. (Here, Yee's work, which involves interrogation and torture,
is never shown.) Lee's '40s Shanghai, though immaculately costumed, has
a standard backlot look; the Hong Kong sequences, largely shot in
Malaysia, are much more flavorsome.
Tang, a Beijing drama student
who's previously played in some TV series, holds her own against Hong
Kong vet Leung, who suggests the cold calculation of his character
without ever going much deeper. Fellow vet Chen doesn't get many
chances beyond the mahjong table, while Wang Leehom, as the leader of
the resistance cell, is just OK, sans much personality.
Alexandre
Desplat's music injects some badly needed emotion and drama at certain
points, while lensing by Rodrigo Prieto has little of the variety and
atmosphere he's demonstarted on recent assignments like "Babel,"
"Alexander" and Lee's previous "Brokeback Mountain."
Camera (Deluxe color), Rodrigo Prieto; editor, Tim Squyres; music,
Alexandre Desplat; production designer, Pan Lai; supervising art
director, Olympic Lau; costume designer, Pan; sound (Dolby Digital/DTS
Digital), Philip Stockton, Eugene Gearty, Drew Kunin; assistant
director, Rosanna Ng; casting, Ng. Reviewed at Venice Film Festival
(competing), Aug. 29, 2007. (Also in Toronto Film Festival -- Special
Presentations.) MPAA Rating: NC-17. Running time: 157 MIN.
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