Lust, Caution (18)

Film

Thrillers

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Time Out rating:

<strong>Rating: </strong>4/5

User ratings:

<strong>Rating: </strong>4/5
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Time Out says

Mon Oct 15 2007

There’s a superb and important early scene in Ang Lee’s absorbing spy romance, set on a stylised (studio-shot) Hong Kong tram in 1939, as a young troupe of Chinese actors board, flushed with the rousing success of that night’s patriotic play. (The Japanese have already occupied their homeland, British-run Hong Kong is soon to fall.) The exhilarated lead character Wong Chia Chi (a remarkable, film-dominating debut performance by newcomer Wei Tang) thrusts her head out the window to taste the rain, as if to make physical and personal the night’s small triumph. You see in that moment how the innocent young actress may be persuaded, in patriotic duty, to adopt an alias, spy on and seduce, in order to kill Tony Leung’s collaborationist chief of police.

You could call Lee’s Chinese-language version of Eileen Chang’s novella a revisionist wartime thriller. Its sub-Brechtian moments are muted, but it is more than happy to pay self-conscious attention to the period setting, design and clothes to highlight, in echo of David Hare’s ‘Plenty’, the seductive role of dress as disguise and mask. Like Hare (with his OAS volunteer, Kate Nelligan), Lee is interested in applying an emotional and psychological realism to his heroine’s incredible bravery. It seems, in wartime, some are able to assume grave responsibilties, but – as Lee’s film quietly and provocatively suggests – the actions of those that do make mockery of conventional, sex-based, notions of what constitutes courage, honour, love or even patriotism itself. In this sense, the real battlefield, the genuine theatre of truth, in ‘Lust, Caution’ is the bed – the sex – in the arranged flat three years later in Shanghai, something of a last tango wherein Leung’s previously almost obsequiously mannered ‘traitor’ shows his true colours, and Miss Wong, under her alias Mrs Mak, is transformed by the ever-present knowledge that discovery is death. It’s not a companionable film – Lee’s directorial discipline, objectivity and lack of expressionist touch in the use of either Rodrigo Prieto’s camerawork or Alexandre Desplat’s score can push the viewer close to outsider-dom or voyeurism – but its dark romanticism lingers in the mind.

16

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Release details

Rated:

18

UK release:

Fri Jan 4, 2008

Duration:

157 mins

Cast and crew

Director:

Ang Lee

Editor:

Tim Squyres

Producer:

Bill Kong, James Schamus, Ang Lee

Cast:

Wang Leehom, Joan Chen, Tang Wei, Tony Leung

Cinematography:

Rodrigo Prieto

Music:

Alexandre Desplat

Screenwriter:

Wang Hui-Ling, James Schamus

Production Designer:

Pan Lai

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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 4/5 (12 ratings)
  • Perfection.

    Georgia Tue Jan 15 2008
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • Great film, amazing director and actors. Go see...

    johhnym Fri Jan 11 2008
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  • Agree with all the above - including the TO review, which makes a change. This is a compelling, complex, grown-up film, which makes great, evocative use of its historical setting; just as good, in its very different way, as the wonderful Brokeback Mountain. The much commented-upon sex is extraordinary - not so much for its rather disturbing eroticism as its total integration into the story. Not a trace of gratuitousness here - it gets to the deepest core of its participants, who set new standards in cinematic sex, and expresses the movies' basic themes of collusion and betrayal more profoundly than any amount of dialogue..

    andy pearmain Wed Jan 9 2008
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • Take a packed lunch, thermos flask and switch off the mobile. This is a film to savor and enjoy a paced build up to an inevitable conclusion. What great cinema to start the year with!

    Paul Sun Jan 6 2008
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • It is the film that only Chinese could understand. There are so many body languages. They even communicate only by eyes... It is a film you need to think not only watch!

    miss q Sat Jan 5 2008
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  • That's a beautifully written review - just excellent.

    Gabriela Thu Jan 3 2008
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