In The Mood For Love: Viewer Comments

Viewer Comments Viewer Comments:
In The Mood For Love
All Content Used With Permission.


TIP: Log In to enable enhanced Interact features.NEED HELP?

    by victimblue


Very good romantic movie. Not in the class as the classic "Shall We Dance", because that was indeed a fantastic romantic movie (not the Jennifer Lopez movie), but this film is in a class by itself. The mood, the music, the story is just classy. I enjoyed it. Not for everyone though. Action and kung fu buffs keep away.
LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW!



    by LC37204


Everybody knows it is a classic.
LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW!



    by SJ8469


Beautifully told story.
LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW!



    by IV38037


Beautiful movie. Impressive photography. I love Maggie Cheung!!!
LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW!



    by SW21843


LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW!



    by Hsiung Leu

This film is very powerful due to the use of lush colors and camera work. Cinematography, lighting, costume, and musical score bleed into one creating only beauty. The chemistry between Tony Leung and Maggie Cheung has been seen on screen for quite some time, yet the audience is not observing a traditional romance. The suppressed emotions of both characters and their attempts to maintain their moral integrity, despite two cheating spouses, is a powerful tool. What is bred between them is a lingering mood coupled with a passion that is never caught on-screen. In effect we are left with only questions.
LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW!



    by Michael



When it comes to cinema, gentleness - very probably a virtue - is certainly a relief. We are now so used to characters parading their behavior extrovertly, ideas which bludgeon us with their obviousness, and cameras which move with neurotic frenzy that it is uplifting to witness a story which unfolds in peace and quiet. And quietness, by the way, doesn't mean bland.

What we have here is a beautifully-tailored, low key (but always dramatic) story by Wong Kar-wai (all of whose films have won awards, including Best Director at Cannes for "Happy Together"), which details the developing relationship between a young man and woman, both of whose spouses, they eventually learn, are cheating on them. As they are drawn together, initially by a pleasant, warm formality, and eventually by much deeper feelings in a cultural climate where respectability is crucial, they do their utmost to hide their small moves from those around them.

In fact, Wong Kar-wai - a most intelligent, thoughtful director - only ever has the two key characters in close up so that we absorb the essence of the relationship, and the film. A true master of visual storytelling, he makes close ups of a hand knocking on a door, mustard being placed on a plate, and a quick blink of an eye entirely relevant to the picture's emotional core. Both Maggie Cheung and Tony Leung are at one with the director's desire for performances which rely on nuance, and they powerfully express that guilt.

LOG IN TO COMMENT ON THIS REVIEW!



CLOSE THIS WINDOW

This window is a "pop-up" from at HKFlix.com.
If you've arrived here from somewhere else,
please CLICK HERE for our home page!