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Capone Savors Wong Kar Wai’s MY BLUEBERRY NIGHTS!

Published at:  Apr 21, 2008 5:26:01 AM CDT


Hey, everyone. ”Moriarty” here.

I like this one, and I don’t care what anyone else says about it. It’s a sweet little movie, a light little thing, and I’m curious to see if Capone liked it anymore than the general film press seems to:



Hey folks. Capone in Chicago here.

Sometimes when other critics come down hard on a movie, I'm either right there with them or at least I understand why people might not like a film. But with the latest bit of sumptuous filmmaking from Wong Kar Wai, I am truly baffled by some of the hateful criticism lobbed at this movie. Granted, the version being shown in the United States is about 15-20 minutes shorter than the version that played at Cannes last year and the version that played in virtually every other country in the world (gee, thanks, Weinstein Company), so perhaps in those missing minutes there is something so egregious that my fragile mind would have simply imploded with loathing. But I don't think so. MY BLUEBERRY NIGHTS is filled with the kind of beautiful visions and actors that Wong has graced us with in the past (IN THE MOOD FOR LOVE; 2046; CHUNGKING EXPRESS).

It's the modest story of a New York woman named Elizabeth (singer Norah Jones) who is jilted by her lover and spends the next several weeks hoping to run into him at a diner run by Jude Law. The two form a strange and beautiful fondness for each other, and right when things look like they might click between them, she decides to travel the country in search of herself. Along the way, she continues to send Law postcards detailing her adventures. She lands a job as a waitress in a dive bar in Tennessee, where she meets a regular customer (David Strathairn) and his estranged wife (Rachel Weisz). In Nevada, she crosses paths with a professional and highly unlucky gambler (Natalie Portman). But we always get the sense that in the end she will return to her humble diner owner. There's no real drama in MY BLUEBERRY NIGHTS, just a succession of interesting conversations, attractive performers and an underlying sense of loneliness and tragedy. Do we ever get a sense that she discovers the "real" her? Not especially, but I'm still glad I got to spend time with her and her acquaintances. The film draws us in through Jones' understated but still compelling acting. She seems utterly unaware of acting for the cameras, and this makes her seem very natural and genuine. But she pulls us in, and we are quite deeply wanting her to find herself and land where she will be most fulfilled.

MY BLUEBERRY NIGHTS is far more simple and straight-forward than Wong's previous films. He's not trying as hard to push the overly dramatic melodrama on his audience, and the result is a more naturalistic, almost home-spun piece that I found very easy to settle into. And unlike Wong's earlier works, which always seem to focus on two people who do not belong together, here the couple clearly does. Then the director and co-writer (with pulp crime novelist Lawrence Block) spend most of the film ripping out our hearts by keeping this couple apart and having separate lives to become emotionally prepared for their reunion. This deceptive romantic sketch is loaded with longing and a deep heart, and I still reflect on its beauty weeks after I first saw it.

Capone



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    Readers Talkback

  • Apr 21, 2008 5:33:37 AM CDT

    ...

    by duncan_idaho72

    no first posters

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 21, 2008 6:58:52 AM CDT

    second

    by chishu_ryu

  • Apr 21, 2008 7:02:10 AM CDT

    Will wait for this on DVD

    by chishu_ryu

    As I currently reside in the American equivalent of Tattooine, and we don't get cool artsy foreign films from cool artsy foreign directors like Wong Kar Wei. Ang Lee is about the best we'll get...

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 21, 2008 7:17:44 AM CDT

    Could not agree more

    by jhodulik

    Just caught this one last Friday and I feel the same way you do, Capone. It was a risky move keeping Jeremy and Elisabeth separate for such a large part of the movie, but those of us who were able to buy into it ended up really moved.

    It is also so refreshing to read a review of this movie without a paragraph bashing Norah Jones. It may not have been the most memorable performance of all time, but she seemed quite capable of carrying the film on her shoulders. Not once while watching did I feel that Jones was a weak link in the movie -- I liked the performance.

    Absolutely one of my favorites in a long, long time.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 21, 2008 8:35:50 AM CDT

    I keep wanting to see 2046

    by series7

    But it always looks REALLY boring. Is it? I heard how good it is. But sometimes with Asain films and if they are kind of slow, ADD sets in and i go to sleep.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 21, 2008 11:37:24 AM CDT

    the americans need their happy ending.

    by cloudrider`

    so what they do? they get a true original artist, one whose idea of romance is always longing but never attaining, and they give him a movie with a happy ending. just like hollywood.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 21, 2008 1:23:14 PM CDT

    Great review

    by hoggydog

    I've been looking forward to this one for a while, despite the bad reviews. It is nice to see that somebody liked it and appreciates its simplicity.

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 21, 2008 1:57:40 PM CDT

    I liked 2046.

    by pops freshemeyer

    One of these days I need to watch In The Mood For Love and 2046 back to back...

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 21, 2008 4:49:11 PM CDT

    count me there...

    by blackthought

    regardless of the word...wong is one of my top 5 fave directors...so yeah...

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 21, 2008 7:22:28 PM CDT

    What is it about Norah Jones that

    by garbage

    makes me want to be way better-looking and much more charismatic?

    Reply to Talkback

  • Apr 21, 2008 8:00:39 PM CDT

    This movie is actually pretty great

    by s.lowrey

    I was skeptical going in but it's actually quite good. Even WKW's "average" films are better than most director's best efforts. Can't wait for The Lady From Shanghai.

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