Venice
Help Me Eros
Bangbang Wo Aishen (Taiwan)
A Homegreen Films production. Produced by Vincent Wang. Executive
producer, Tsai Ming-Liang. (International sales: Fortissimo Films,
Amsterdam.) Directed, written by Lee Kang-sheng.
With: Lee Kang-sheng, Yin Shin, Jane Liao, Dennis Nieh.
(Mandarin dialogue)
"Help Me Eros" opens on the televised image of a carp being prepared
alive -- scaled, cut, sauced and eaten while its mouth opens and closes
frantically. As a metaphor for the mental state of its hero (played by
helmer/scripter Lee Kang-sheng in the passive, deadpan wanderer role he
practically patented for Tsai Ming-liang), pic hits an immediate high
it strains in vain to duplicate or maintain. Exercise in petulant
anomie and sexless eroticism constantly sabotages its own potential
strengths, languidly repeating its most daring concepts while proudly
parading its hokiest visuals. Outlook appears dim.
Ah Jie (Lee)
has lost all his money in the stock market, living secretly in his
repossessed upscale apartment and driving around in his repossessed
car. Depressed, he often calls the suicide hotline, fantasizing about
the woman he talks to, and carefully nurtures the marijuana plants in
his closet.
Jie starts an affair with Shin (Yin Shin), one of
several beautiful, scantily clad young women (the F4 Girls, of
Taiwanese TV fame) who slide down stripper poles to sell betel nuts to
drive-by customers. This deepening relationship does not prevent him
from stalking an attractive woman he thinks is Chyi, his telephone
lifeline. A parallel story tracks the real Chyi (Jane Liao), a sad sack
who has become fat on her gay husband's (Dennis Nieh) gourmet cooking,
a poor but filling substitute for affection.
When Jie isn't
fantasizing about women (a veritable runway of bordello cliches --
schoolgirl, dominatrix, bride, nurse, etc., who unconvincingly rub
themselves against assorted surfaces in an empty simulation of
eroticism), he is sexually engaged in stand-up duos and lie-down trios
with beautiful betel nut girls, bathed in blinding white light or
covered in colored psychedelic patterns.
Phantasmal images --
Chyi lowering herself into a bathtub of eels, a veritable storm of
lottery tickets raining down on a street of broken dreams -- are
intriguing, but never quite live up to their promise. By contrast, more
"realistic" images often blossom into pure nightmare -- an ostrich egg
broken open with fanfare on Chyi's husband's cooking show (source of
the live carp broadcast) delivers an unhatched baby ostrich into the
waiting frying pan.
Unlike his 2003 directorial debut, "The
Missing," which Lee neither scripted nor starred in, "Help Me Eros"
drowns in autobiographic fallacy, the experiences recounted apparently
Lee's own. Thus, his supposedly superficial antihero is limned with
utter pathos, if far too few good gags. Borrowing his visual vocabulary
from Tsai, but without the latter's extraordinary sense of composition,
Lee's own style only rarely breaks away from that of his mentor (and
executive producer/production designer).
Tech credits are suitably flashy.
Camera (color, widescreen), Liao Pen-jung; editor, Lei Chen-ching;
music, Fumio Yasuda; production designer, Tsai Ming-liang; sound (Dolby
Digital), Du Tuu-Chih. Reviewed at Venice Film Festival (competing),
Sept. 3, 2007. (Also in Toronto Film Festival -- Vanguard.) Running
time: 104 MIN.
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