• _Saturday Fiction_ by Lou Ye

    From septimus_millenicom@q.com@21:1/5 to All on Wed Aug 17 08:24:43 2022
    If you ask me, the two greatest films to have come out
    of the People's Republic of China are _Summer Palace_
    and _Purple Butterfly_, both directed by Lou Ye.
    _Saturday Fiction_ is almost as good; it is penned by
    his long-time collaborator Yingli Ma (based on a couple
    novels?) and may have been edited by Lou Ye himself,
    although I have to check that. It competed at Venice
    and must have had a large budget by this director's
    standard; the cast is headlined by Gong Li as the
    actress/secret agent, famous Taiwanese actor Mark
    Chao as her theater director and lover, and Pascal
    Greggory as the spymaster in the French Concession
    in Shanghai on the eve of the Japanese attack on
    earl Harbor. Gong Li, fluent in many different
    languages in the film, is as good and as enigmatic
    as she was in _2046_. She also has a surprising,
    extended action sequence which is briskly shot and
    choreographed. After the dozens of put-upon roles
    she has taken up since her debut in _Ju Dou_, it is
    a welcome change. The unlikely spy's soft seduction
    skills -- towards both men and women -- are impressive
    too, and those scenes really well shot (hand-held,
    tactile; Christopher Doyle would have approved).

    The film does not unfold in a straight-forward fashion,
    with many scenes deliberately disguising whether they
    are parts of the the stage play or are "true" fiction.
    The film indeed has Lou's typical improvised feel, as
    if saying spying is kind of like acting or dancing to
    jazz! The hand-held camera work and sharp cuts are so
    aggressive they can be dizzying until you get used to
    it. The B&W photography and lighting, using almost
    entirely "natural" light source (e.g., from lamps on
    set), are amazing to see in this day and age. (The
    cinematographer is not even listed in imdb, but is
    apparently Zhen Jian, who has shot and edited Lou's
    previous films.) The period production design looks
    very impressive, although I have never been in Shanghai.
    The Lyceum Theater and the Cathay Hotel central to
    the film are genuine historical sites; not sure if
    the film is actually shot there.

    I think I like _Purple Butterfly_ slightly better. There
    are even more factions and competing loyalties in this
    film, and the resolution is oddly drawn out. However,
    most Chinese directors seem to be afraid of silence,
    afraid of a single actor in the frame, and Gong Li's
    tour de force work at the end is truly worth watching
    as a (somewhat unrealistic) showcase for the actress.

    This is the best Chinese language film I have seen in
    a long, long time. Lou Ye is the PRC's greatest director,
    ever. He is mostly forgotten by Western critics now,
    but _Saturday Fiction_ reminds us what he can do with
    a serious budget and a few big name actors.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)