| The late cantopop superstar Anita Mui plays a ghost in search of her lost love, portrayed by the late Leslie Cheung, in the 1987 supernatural Hong Kong romance Rouge (also known as Yin ji kau, or The Blush Locket). I was fortunate to encounter at my local library a DVD of this pleasing film starring two of Hong Kong’s most beloved actors.
Produced by Jackie Chan and Golden Harvest and directed by Stanley Kwan, Rouge won five prizes at the Hong Kong Film Awards, including Best Picture. Mui received the HKFA Best Actress prize and a nod for her performance of the film’s theme song. The quality of this haunting romance makes clear that these honors were richly deserved.
In modern-day Hong Kong, a busy newspaperman, Yuen (Alex Man), receives a visit from a beautiful young woman (Mui) clad in an old-fashioned chongsam. She asks to place a personal ad in an upcoming edition of the paper, and Yuen assists her. When he leaves the office for the evening, he sees the woman following him to a noodle stand and then onto one of Hong Kong’s double-decker buses. At the noodle stand, he answers her seemingly polite chitchat about where he lives, but seeing her on the bus gives him a sense of unease that turns to terror when he realizes that she’s a ghost.
The young woman is the spirit of Fleur, a courtesan from one of the foremost brothels in 1930s Hong Kong. She shared a doomed romance with one of her clients, a wealthy merchant’s son named Chan Chen-Pang (Cheung). Since then, Fleur has searched in vain for Chan in the spirit world, and now seeks to be reunited with him as the anniversary of their separation approaches. The personal ad was intended to summon Chan to the site of their love affair (which she later discovers has been converted to a kindergarten) if he’s still alive or reincarnated, and she hopes that Chan’s spirit will join her if he has died.
Initially, Yuen and his girlfriend/colleague Ah Chor (Emily Chu) are uneasy about Fleur’s attaching herself to them. Things have been strained between Ah Chor and Yuen lately, and of course Ah Chor was less than pleased to return home and find Yuen entertaining a pretty woman. (She’s both mollified and unnerved when she discovers that Fleur, although corporeal, has no heartbeat.) But as they learn Fleur’s story, which is told gradually in flashbacks, they become increasingly sympathetic to the ghost’s plight, and do what they can to help her.
Stories of lovelorn lady ghosts are popular in Hong Kong folklore, and Rouge draws on that tradition. But the film also underscores the changes between modern Hong Kong and the traditional past, both by its contrasts between Fleur’s time and the era the young couple inhabit, and by its updating of the time-honored wandering ghost story. For example, Fleur’s search takes her both to an outdoor performance of traditional Chinese Opera and a Hong Kong movie set.
It’s soon clear that Fleur’s death resulted from a suicide pact with Chan as a result of their forbidden romance, and that resolving her heartache is her sole hope for breaking the bonds that imprison her spirit on Earth. Symbolic of that bond, Fleur still treasures a rouge box given to her by Chan. (The rouge box is also a none-too-subtle reminder of Fleur’s former profession.)
But the relationship between the two present-day journalists is nearly as important as the past relationship between Fleur and Chan. As Fleur relates her sad tale of doomed romance, the two realize how much they value each other. The two discuss whether they would commit suicide for the other, and they agree that neither would. But this revelation doesn’t weaken their relationship – quite the contrary. (The fact that the modern couple explicitly rejects suicide as an expression of love is one of the many contrasts between past and present.)
Yuen and Ah Chor express their increased passion for each other in the film’s most explicit – but still sufficiently discreet – sex scene. As they dance the horizontal mambo (covered demurely by a sheet pulled up to their shoulders), Fleur enters the room and watches sadly. Although not a word is spoken, the viewer feels her loss and regret at having left the physical world.
Indeed, one of Rouge’s strengths is strong performances by the stars, particularly Mui and Cheung. Mui is alternately coquettish, passionate and sad, and Cheung displays both the arrogant confidence of a wealthy scion and the indolent dissipation of an opium addict. Particularly touching is a poignant scene in which Chan brings Fleur home to meet his family, and Fluer pleads in vain for them to accept their love. As a bonus, Mui is given the opportunity to sing – after all, courtesans of the time were expected to entertain their guests in many ways.
Of course, Mui was at least as well known in Hong Kong for her singing as her acting talent. As a pop star, Mui was known for her many personas, and she mirrors that complexity in the film. Although playing only one character, she adopts many different looks, including appearing dressed in male costume during the opening scene where Chan meets her.
At one point, Chan tells her that he’s seen her with heavy makeup, light makeup and no makeup at all, and he likes them all. Fleur’s spiritual strength as a ghost is conveyed in the film by the intensity of her makeup – when she’s in full force, she appears with bright red lips and pale skin, but when she despairs she appears wan and without adornment. It’s a testimony to Mui’s beauty that even without apparent makeup she’s still a knockout.
(Chan has an interest in Chinese opera, giving the filmmakers an opportunity to have Cheung appear in traditional costume and makeup.)
Kwan shepherds the proceedings along at an unhurried pace that may try the patience of viewers used to high-adrenaline Hong Kong action films. But the gradual narrative style is one of the film’s strengths. By revealing the story of Fleur and Chan’s tragic love slowly, Kwan maintains the viewer’s interest.
Anita Mui and Leslie Cheung both enjoyed abundant fame and popularity at the time of their deaths, and in films like Rouge, it’s easy to see why. Hong Kong Digital is exactly right when it says, “In light of the tragic deaths of Cheung and Mui in 2003, the film cannot help but become an even more poignant experience.” Fans of the two stars, those interested in learning more about their careers, or anyone who appreciates a good ghost yarn will enjoy this satisfying collaboration. |