Monday, December 2, 2019
Millenium Mambo
The later films of Taiwanese director Hou Hsiao Hsien, including Millennium Mambo, appear to have garnered the director a reputation of being cinematically ââ¬Å"difficultâ⬠(Wood, 2001).Advertising We will write a custom essay sample on Millenium Mambo specifically for you for only $16.05 $11/page Learn More Released in 2001,Millennium Mambo represents the ââ¬Å"15th film from Hou, a leader in Taiwanââ¬â¢s cinematic new wave of the 1980s. Although widely considered one of the greatest filmmakers working today, with each new movie considered a major event,â⬠Millennium Mambo nonetheless was the first of Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s films to secure a North American release (Dargis, 2004: p. 2). Hou Hsiao-hsien belongs to Taiwanââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"New Cinemaâ⬠group, a collective of Taiwanese directors that emerged in the 1980s. The ââ¬Å"New Cinemaâ⬠movement collaborated on each otherââ¬â¢s films, and enjoyed solid backing from film critics working in Taiwan at the time. Taiwanese cinema was dominated by ââ¬Å"escapist romances and propaganda filmsâ⬠at that time, thus the ââ¬Å"New Cinemaâ⬠collective broke from tradition and ââ¬Å"used a realistic style to convey their socially concerned themesâ⬠¦and their films ââ¬Å"recognized the fact that Taiwan was not synonymous with Chinaâ⬠(Huang, 1999: no page). Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s work garners the most international recognition amongst the ââ¬Å"New Cinemaâ⬠directors. His subject matter remains almost exclusively grounded in the experience of living in Taiwan, which is in fact his experience, as Hou has spent the lion share of his life living and working in Taiwan (Huang, 1999: no page). Huang (1999) also notes that ââ¬Å"contrasted with the positive influences one can gain from country life in most of Houââ¬â¢s films are the attractions of the city, with its opportunities for a living wage and concomitant confusion of an alie n social structure, and its dissimilar types of human relationships,â⬠which we see evidenced in Millennium Mambo (no page). Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s films remain under the cinematic radar, largely unknown and for the most part unavailable to North American and European cinephiles. This paper will make a case for the distinguishing form of filmmaking applied by Hou Hsiao-Hsien in Millennium Mambo, with a particular emphasis on the directorââ¬â¢s dramatisation of discrete scenes and his use of long shots and master shots to simultaneously create mood while maintaining an emotional distance from his characters.Advertising Looking for essay on art and design? Let's see if we can help you! Get your first paper with 15% OFF Learn More As a rule, Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s films tend to favour aestheticism and mood over narrative structure, largely as a result of Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"intransigent refusal to ââ¬Å"helpâ⬠the audience by making obvious p oints, spelling out meanings, telling us what to think of the characters, or carefully explaining their motivationâ⬠(Wood, 2001: p. 12). Apt to rub critics the wrong way, this creative obstinacy of Houââ¬â¢s can sometimes be read as self-aggrandisement, and results in unflattering criticism such as this dismissal by Jones (1999): ââ¬Å"Hou joined the ever growing number of filmmakers who appear to have climbed too far out on the limb of aestheticism, showing no regard whatsoever for their paying customersâ⬠(Jones, 1999: no page). In order to fully appreciate Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s films, Wood (2001) argues that audiences must ââ¬Å"firstâ⬠¦unlearn the indoctrinations of contemporary Hollywood and become active observers rather than passive receptacles, noticing even the smallest details, pondering their significance, making thematic connections beyond those of narrative, reaching our own decisions rather than having them foisted on usâ⬠(Wood, 2001:p. 12) . Other critics view Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s work as deeply personal. In her essay Looking for Nostalgia: Memory and National Identity in Hou Hsiao-Hsienââ¬â¢s a Time to Live, a Time to Die, Wu (2003) holds that ââ¬Å"Hou Hsiao Hsien consistently drew on his personal life experiences and those of his co-writersââ¬â¢ in the overall structure of the narratives, through which he represented the history of the increasingly industrialised and westernised Taiwanâ⬠(Wu, 2003: p.45). Hou Hsiao Hsien often collaborators with the same writers and cinematographers, all of whom make a conscious attempt to ââ¬Å"projectâ⬠¦themselves into their filmsâ⬠(Wu, 2003: p. 46). In Wuââ¬â¢s (2003) mind, Hou Hsiao Hsien and his screenwriters ââ¬Å"offer the cinematic equivalent of historical representation, raising questions of identity on a symbolic level, in which they appeared to articulate themselves while simultaneously being articulated into historyâ⬠(Wu, 2003: p. 46 ). As such, Hou Hsiao Hsien remain one of a handful of filmmakers concerned with ââ¬Å"national soul searching, [and] reconstructing history as a function of reflecting the presentâ⬠(Wu, 2003: p. 47). Millennium Mambo constructs a loose narrative around main character Vickyââ¬â¢s experience as a hostess in a trendy Taiwanese bar and her relationships with two men: her abusive boyfriend, and an older gangster who befriends her. Kaicer (2001) called Millennium Mambo ââ¬Å"an urban youth film, set in the bars, clubs, and dingy apartments of contemporary Taipeiâ⬠(no page).Advertising We will write a custom essay sample on Millenium Mambo specifically for you for only $16.05 $11/page Learn More The techno inspired soundtrack ââ¬Å"dance music of his Taipei slackers defines the beat of its shots, the drift of its camera, the endless loops within loops of its spiralling chronologyâ⬠(Kaicer, 2001: no page). For Sklar, (2002), Millennium Mambo represents Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"least compellingâ⬠¦narratives, but itââ¬â¢s reassuring to know that the film casts his remarkable artistry and moral seriousness at least another decade into the futureâ⬠(Sklar, 2002: p.12). The filmââ¬â¢s critical welcome, according to Wood (2001), was mainly mixed. Jacobowitz (2005) raved that Millennium Mambo perfectly depicted ââ¬Å"the cool edginess of the alienated youthâ⬠of Taiwan (p.65). Berry and Lu (2005) saw Millennium Mambo as a work of art that ââ¬Å"pursues innovation into a future settingâ⬠(p. 7). Los Angeles Times film critic Manohola Dargis (2004) found that: ââ¬Å"Unlike the characters in director Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s previous films ââ¬â including his masterpieces ââ¬Å"The Puppetmasterâ⬠and ââ¬Å"Flowers of Shanghaiâ⬠ââ¬â Vicky and her friends donââ¬â¢t have strong connections to specific places, to a home or a historyâ⬠¦[yet] as always with this filmma ker, the visual pleasures are enormous and often deeply touching. One of the most ravishing images in a film filled with ravishing images is of Vicky gently lowering her face into some freshly fallen snow. As she raises her head laughing, the camera lingers on the impression sheââ¬â¢s left behind. In the snow, we see the traces of a self already melting into a memoryâ⬠(p. 3). However, when the film premiered at the Cannes festival in 2001, Millennium Mambo garnered the dubious honour of being ââ¬Å"the first of Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s mature films to receive a less than enthusiastic receptionâ⬠(Wood, 2001: p. 12). Millennium Mambo was ââ¬Å"dismissed by critics in a perfunctory line or two with no attempt to relate it to Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s previous workâ⬠(Wood, 2001: p. 12). Like Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s other works, Millennium Mambo is backward looking, and told from memory. Sklar (2002) remarks that in Millennium Mambo ââ¬Å"Hou Hsiao Hsien returned to [the] curious aspect of his penchant for the past [in] that the film opens with a voice-over explaining that its events ââ¬Å"happened ten years ago in the year 2001,â⬠casting the present as historyâ⬠(Sklar, 2002: p.12). Though set in the recognizable present, Millennium Mambo continues Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s tradition of looking to the past to offer commentary on the present. In Millennium Mambo, Sklar (2002) understand ââ¬Å"Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s strategy for taking on todayââ¬â¢s chaotic, incoherent postmodern culture ââ¬â as he makes it appear to be ââ¬â involves viewing it as evanescent, as having already happened and, presumably, later been transformed into something elseâ⬠(Sklar, 2002: p.12).Advertising Looking for essay on art and design? Let's see if we can help you! Get your first paper with 15% OFF Learn More Culturevulture.net (2004) describes Hou Hsiao Hsien ââ¬Å"as a member of the ââ¬Å"master shotâ⬠school of filmmakingâ⬠(No page). In standard filmmaking, the master or establishing shot happens first and presents the key elements of any given scene. The filmmaker then repositions the camera in nearer proximity to the subjects held within the frame, be they actors or objects, culminating usually in a close-up. When it comes time to edit, the filmmaker typically intercuts between the establishing shot and the medium and close shots to generate the intensity of the scene (Culturevulture.net, 2004: no page). Culturevulture.net (2004) highlights the fact that ââ¬Å"Hou Hsiao Hsien almost never engages in this latter aspect of standard film technique. A movie composed mostly of long shots, especially extended takes as is usual for Hou Hsiao Hsien, tends to keep the audience emotionally distanced from the characters and the action. As a result, Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s films are criticized as boring, and sometimes they are. But at his best, Hou Hsiao Hsien can provoke overwhelmingly intense emotions precisely because the viewer has worked to earn it. Hou Hsiao-Hsien films offer a generous store of images and feelings that lavishly reward time and patienceâ⬠(No page). Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s shooting style and camera work in Millennium Mambo relays a similar technique, although according to Sea (2002), Millennium Mambo ââ¬Å"is the first of six filmsâ⬠¦to be realized in the next ten yearsâ⬠¦that deals with Taiwanââ¬â¢s present youth, and is devoid of the long pans, evocative images and detached shooting style that have typified Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s workâ⬠(No page). Millennium Mambo contains a disconnected, emotionally frozen feeling, evoked mainly by the performances, but also by the way that the film is shot. An example of this occurs in the seduction scene (Millennium Mambo, 2001). Vicky returns from her hostess job to find her boyfriend, Hao Hao, at home and in the mood for love (Millennium Mambo, 2001).. Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s camera stays far back from the scene as Hao Hao attempts to seduce Vicky, first through romantic kissing and finally through cunnilingus (Millennium Mambo, 2001).. Vicky, meanwhile, keeps her lips turned away from Hao Haoââ¬â¢s, and while he takes off her clothes she drinks a cup of tea and smokes a cigarette (Millennium Mambo, 2001).. Eventually, Hao Hao gives up and returns to the bedroom (Millennium Mambo, 2001).. The indifference and boredom that Vicky extends towards Hao Haoââ¬â¢s attempted lovemaking is exquisitely captured through the remoteness of the shooting style (Millennium Mambo, 2001). Like Vicky, the camera feels passively disinterested, essentially standing back from the action, offering no encouragement to the viewer, and waiting for Hao Haoââ¬â¢s frisky moment to be over (Millennium Mambo, 2001). The lack of passion in the shooting style perfectly mirrors the lack of passion and apathy that forms the heart of the scene, and of Vicky and Hao Haoââ¬â¢s relationship (Millennium Mambo, 2001). Critical response to the shooting style Hou Hsiao Hsien exhibited in Millennium Mambo was again mixed. Wilmington (2004) found that ââ¬Å"Hou Hsiao Hsien, who often shoots his scenes in single takes with a roving camera, used only the sketchiest of scripts. Most of the heavily emotional scenes were improvised from brief outlines. Yet, working in this minimalist, seize-the-moment wayâ⬠¦rivets our eyes and often wrings our heartâ⬠(p. 2). Halcyon Realms (2005) lamented that ââ¬Å"in the case of Millennium Mambo the potential bore factor skyrockets because the photographer is Lee Pingbin, who loves to lock down his camera and shoot empty compositions where the actors are completely out of frameâ⬠(No page). Similarly, Thom (2002) remarked that ââ¬Å"Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s film could pass for a documentary, if it werenâ⬠â¢t for his extreme aesthetic approachâ⬠(no page). Kaicer (2001) found: ââ¬Å"Contemporary Hou Hsiao Hsienâ⬠¦disorienting, experimental, jarring. Unprecedented for him, most of Millennium Mambo is shot in shallow focus and medium close-up, with a roaming, exploratory camera always in motion. A Hou Hsiao Hsien who directs the viewerââ¬â¢s eye, too, is something new: weââ¬â¢re used to slowly, patiently exploring the spaces he lays out for us, to exercising a certain autonomy as we read meaning into his films. Hou Hsiao Hsien controls our eyes in Millennium Mambo and shows us what he himself seems to be in the process of discovering, in something like real timeâ⬠(No page). Bingham (2003) described Millennium Mamboââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"intensely claustrophobic tone and oblique compositionsâ⬠¦characters half-viewed through doorways etc,â⬠yet also pointed to the similarity in content between Millennium Mambo and Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s earlier work Flowers of Shanghai. ââ¬Å"Thematically, in its portrait of a girl building up to dumping her unemployed, layabout boyfriend whom she supports, it can be seen as a companion piece to Flowers of Shanghai, in that both films feature a protagonist desperate for freedom from an aimless relationshipâ⬠¦or series of them in the earlier filmâ⬠¦and independence in a culture still largely unsympathetic to their plight (No page). Huang (1999) echoes Wood in her suggestion that to appreciate Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s films, audience members must remove the lens of Hollywood and open their minds to a filmmaker whose narrative bias leans towards indirectness (No page). In Huangââ¬â¢s (1999) mind, Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s films ââ¬Å"present the viewer with certain problems, and not only because they demand some awareness of Taiwanese political and cultural history during the second half of the last century [but because] â⬠¦their treatment of narrative structure has become increasingly chall enging and unorthodox (No page). This is especially true of his shooting style. In Huangââ¬â¢s (1999) words, ââ¬Å"one feels at times that Hou Hsiao Hsien shoots only the sequences that really engage him, leaving the audience to fill in narrative hiatuses with a combination of common sense and imagination. The many characters are seldom given the careful, emphatic introductions to which Hollywood has accustomed us, and close ups are rare, point-of-view shots non-existent; sequences are often entirely in long-shot. In short, Hou Hsiao Hsien expects us to work, concentrate, be vigilant; the films construct a spectator who is at once detached but sympatheticâ⬠(No page). In essence, Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s shooting style emulates Vickyââ¬â¢s experience of life in Taiwan ââ¬â disconnected, emotionally detached, non participatory, and boring. The absence of a real narrative in Millennium Mambo echoes Vicky aimless existence. As Wilmington (2004) describes ââ¬Å"Hou Hsia o Hsien has evolved an almost rarefied technique, suggesting a life that seems to rush past his camera, unmediated and unawareâ⬠(p. 2). In the case of Vicky, the speed of the bar contrast sharply with the slow pace of change she exacts in her relationship with Hao Hao. How Hou Hsiao Hsien shoots Vickyââ¬â¢s world is exactly how Vicky sees the world ââ¬â as a passive spectator, never really coming close to anything. Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s shooting style appears to be patterned after his protagonistââ¬â¢s lived experience of life in Taiwan ââ¬â passive, fleeting, distance. Burnett (2004) points to Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s ability to ââ¬Å"manipulateâ⬠¦the device of the fade or the dissolve to deflect spectator attention away from the amount of time that has elapsed between segments and other such questions of plot and to direct he/she towards pondering the evolution of the filmââ¬â¢s styleâ⬠(No page). In conclusion, director Hou Hsiao Hsienââ¬â¢s Millennium Mambo contains many of the filmmakerââ¬â¢s trademark touches. It is an aesthetically beautiful film, peopled by beautiful actors and replete with lush imagery. However, the shooting style, the lack of nearness to the characters, creates an emotional distance that imbues the film with a lost quality that lingers throughout. Hou Hsiao Hsien shoots and stages Millennium Mambo in a way that renders Vickyââ¬â¢s actual experience of life ââ¬â disengaged, severed from any real emotional engagement with the world or with others, and drifting somewhat directionless through life. Reference List Berry, Chris and Lu, Feiyi. (2005) Island on the edge: Taiwan new cinema and after. Hong Kong, Hong Kong University Press. Bingham, A. (2003) Cinema of Sadness: Hou Hsiao-hsien and ââ¬ËNew Taiwanese Filmââ¬â¢. Cinetext [online]. Available from: http://cinetext.philo.at/magazine/bingham/cinema_of_sadness.html . Burnett, C. (2004) Parametric narration and optical transition de vices: Hou Hsiao-hsien and Robert Bresson in comparison. Senses of Cinema [online] 57. Available from: http://www.sensesofcinema.com/2004/feature-articles/hou_hsiao_hsien_bresson/ . culturevulture.net (17 January 2004 ) Films of Hou Hsiao-Hsien. China Through a Lens [online]. Available from: http://www.china.org.cn/english/NM-e/84923.htm . Dargis, M. (2004) Woman held captive to love in ââ¬ËMamboââ¬â¢. Los Angeles Times [online]. Available from: http://articles.latimes.com/2004/mar/26/entertainment/et-mambo26 . Halcyonrealms.com (December 4, 2005) Millenium mambo. Halcyon Realms [online]. Available from: http://halcyonrealms.com/film/millenium-mambo/ . Huang, V. (1999) Hou Hsiao-hsien. Film Reference [online]. Available from: http://www.filmreference.com/Directors-Ha-Ji/Hou-Hsiao-Hsien.html . Jacobowitz, F. (2005) Hou Hsiao-hsienââ¬â¢s Cafe Lumiere. CineAction [online] 65. Available from: http://cineaction.ca/ . Jones, K. (1999) Cinema with a roof over its head. Film Commen t [online]. Available from: http://www.filmlinc.com/fcm/9-10-99/hou.htm . Kraicer, S. (2001) Millennium mambo. A Chinese Cinema Site [online]. Available from: http://www.chinesecinemas.org/millenniummambo.html . Sea, L. (2002) Millennium mambo. LoveHKFilm.com [online], Available from: http://www.lovehkfilm.com/panasia/millennium_mambo.htm . Sklar, R. (2002) Hidden history, modern hedonism: The films of Hou Hsiao-hsien. Cineaste [online], Fall. Available from: http://www.cineaste.com/ . Thom, F. (2002) Millennium mambo. Plume Noire. Available from: http://www.plume-noire.com/movies/cult/millenniummambo.html . Wilmington, M. (2004) `Mamboââ¬â¢ a raw film poem about the pain of desire. Chicago Tribune [online]. Available from: http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2004-04-16/features/0404150458_1_bar-girl-hao-hao-shu-qi . Wood, R. (2001) Flowers of Shanghai. CineAction [online], 11. Available from: http://cineaction.ca/ . Wu, I. (2003) Looking for nostalgia: memory and national identit y in Hou Hsiao-Hsienââ¬â¢s a time to live, a time to die. CineAction [online] 45. Available from: http://cineaction.ca/ . This essay on Millenium Mambo was written and submitted by user Bryant B. to help you with your own studies. You are free to use it for research and reference purposes in order to write your own paper; however, you must cite it accordingly. You can donate your paper here.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.