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directed by Wong
Kar-wai
China - France - Germany - Hong Kong 2004
"2046" is a melancholic and sad history of love and memory, of
the time that passes; of the desire to recover time past, to recover lost love.
A writer seduces women and eventually abandons them when they ask for his love.
The women are at first offended and hurt, but reacting with pride. Nevertheless
they continue to live in an all-embracing wish to get him and his love back. At
later occasions the women try to avoid the memories, not wanting the memories,
but him. For his part, the memories are all that are left to him in his solitary
existence, where he avoids the enduring relationship with one woman.
When
leaving Bai Ling for the last time after she asked him to stay, he takes her
hand and says: “… there is one thing, I never lend to anyone? He turns around
and leaves her. He is like the "bird without legs that can only fly and fly, and
sleep in the wind when it is tired. The bird only lands once in its life...
that's when it dies.", a history that appears again and again in the films of
WKW.
2046 is an imaginary place and time. It is the number of the hotel
room, where he and Su Li-zhen met in “In the Mood for Love? now transformed
into an imaginary place of a memory of lost love. When he once more in "2046"
comes across a hotel room with the same number he wants to move in, but is given
the room number 2047.
From the room number 2047 he begins to write the
story of the future, an imaginary world of the year 2046 where all the memories
are found in a never-changing state. He leaves for 2046, not as himself, but in
the body of a Japanese. What he finds is a never-changing world of androids.
2046 is also the year when Hong Kong will be returned to China, perhaps
converting the metropolis into a never-changing, imaginary place in the memory
of the Hongkongese part of the population.
But the film is not science
fiction. It revolves around the present moment, showing how it is in a
continuous flux, turning present moments into time past. In the mind, the lost
love, represented by gestures, feelings, persons and movements, are not bound to
the past, but can reappear in the future. When the protagonist writes the story
of 2046, persons from his life tend to reappear in the futuristic world. This
imaginary world does not comprise the everyday linear time, but is rather a
reservoir, from which the present, ever passing moments can
materialize.
The circular movement between the present and the
non-present is not only a matter of 2046, but is valid for the films of WKW as
such. The movie "2046" circles in time and space, back and forth between the
former “worlds?of WKW’s earlier movies, mostly “Days of Being Wild? “Fallen
Angels?and “In the Mood for Love? Words and gestures are repeated, places and
persons reappear, stories are retold ?yet a little different. So the world is
moving in circles, but the circles are spiraling ?always the same, yet a little
different.
WKW is famous for finishing his unfinished movies. "2046" is a
very accomplished unfinished movie.
"2046" is a very impressive and
beautiful movie, photographed by cinematographer Christopher Doyle, with
entrancing, sometimes hypnotic, music. The time of the present and the memories
are very darkly photographed with large, shadowy frames and glowing colors.
Contrary to this, the travel of 2046 is bright with strong vibrant colors. 5 out
of 5.
Peter Frost-Olsen & Rigmor Kappel Schmidt
Posters
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Theatrical Release: May 20, 2004 (Cannes Film Festival)
Reviews More Reviews DVD Reviews
DVD Comparison:
Guang Dong Video - Region 0 - PAL vs. Mei-Ah Entertainment - Region 0 - NTSC
Big thanks to Peter Frost-Olsen and Warren Murphy for the Screen Caps!
(Guang Dong Video - Region 0 - PAL - LEFT vs. Mei-Ah Entertainment - Region 0 - NTSC - RIGHT)
| DVD Box Covers |
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| Distribution |
Guang Dong Video Region 0 - PAL |
Mei-Ah
Entertainment Region 0 - NTSC |
| Runtime | 2:11:37 (4% PAL speedup) | 2:09:17 |
| Video |
2.35:1 Original
Aspect Ratio |
2.35:1 Original Aspect Ratio 16X9 enhanced |
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NOTE: The Vertical axis represents the bits transferred per second. The Horizontal is the time in minutes. | ||
| Bitrate:
Guang Dong Video
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| Bitrate:
Mei-Ah Entertainment
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| Audio | Mandarin Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround / Dolby AC-3 or DTS Digital Surround |
Cantonese Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround; Mandarin Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround |
| Subtitles | White (removable): Simplified Chinese, Traditional Chinese, English. The translation of the Japanese speak to Chinese is burned-in. | English, Chinese (Simplified), Chinese (Traditional), none |
| Features | Release Information: Studio: Guang Dong Video Aspect Ratio: Edition Details: Chapters 8 |
Release Information: Studio: Mei-Ah Entertainment Aspect Ratio:
Edition Details: DVD Release Date:
December 10, 2004 Chapters 11 |
Recommended Reading in Chinese/Hong Kong/Taiwanese Cinema (CLICK COVERS or TITLES for more information)
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| Memoirs from the Beijing Film
Academy by Zhen Ni, Chris Berry, Ni Zhen |
Zhang Yimou: Interviews (Conversations
With Filmmakers) by Frances Gateward |
Chinese Films in Focus: 25 New
Takes by Chris Berry |
Wong Kar-Wai: Auteur of Time (Bfi World
Directors) by Stephen Teo |
China into Film: Frames of Reference in
Contemporary Chinese Cinema (Envisioning Asia) by Jerome Silbergeld |
New Chinese Cinemas by Nick Browne |
Once Upon a Time in China : A Guide to
Hong Kong, Taiwanese, and Mainland Chinese Cinema by Jeff Yang |
Chinese Film Theory by George S. Semsel |
Women Through the Lens: Gender and
Nation in a Century of Chinese Cinema by Shuqin Cui |
Tsai Ming-Liang by Tsai Ming-Liang |
Check out more in "The Library"
| Comments | The
first release of this film on DVD was the Guang Dong version and it is a
complete disaster. The main fault is a very intrusive logo "Face" logo
(the company that released the film) that appears on the screen every 5
minutes in the upper left corner. Check the capture right under the menu
captures. It is very distracting and nearly destroys the viewing
experience. The DVD is also not anamorphic, apparently suffers from frame
shifts ghosting, washed out colors, low contrast... needless to say, it's
one to avoid. However, it does win in the sound category as it has a DTS
track. The Mei-Ah release is an improvement. It's anamorphic and has a much sharper image. It seems very dark, but that seems to be the way the film was originally created. The colors and skin tones are more natural. There also seems to be some ghosting, as shown in captures #1 and #7. It's very minor though, so it shouldn't detract too much from the viewing experience. Both releases seem to be cropped; The Guang Dong is missing a lot of information on the right and left sides, whereas the Mei-Ah seems to be missing some information on the bottom. I can't explain the difference in run times... all of the reviews I've come across online list a 129 minute runtime, so perhaps the Guang Dong DVD is an extended version. As for the sound, retailers listed a DTS track in the pre-order specifications but it's not there. The version I've reviewed is the single disc version. There are two other releases; a 2-disc SE and a 3-disc with the film's soundtrack. I am guessing the transfer is the same in all 3 releases. Mei-Ah's SE has lots of extras and apparently english subtitles on those extras as well, but I can't confirm that. The extras on the Guang Dong release don't have any english subs. Overall, the Mei-Ah release is by far the best option at the moment. It's also not overly expensive. I am sure though, that this isn't the definitive release and there will be a better one down the road. It is not the same version
of 2046 on the two releases: The Mei Ah contains several expanded scenes
and with other scenes are slightly changed. I have a timetable of the
major differences. The subtitles are not identical (in a several cases I
got a better understanding of something "unsaid" on the Mei Ah), much more
easy to read because they are displayed in longer time, and an important
poem is translated to English, which it wasn't in the Chinese
release.
"Yes, there does seem to
be artifacts in the DVD, which I neglected to mention in the review. I
also found them noticeable during the black and white scenes, there seemed
to be some pixilation going on. |
DVD
Menus
(Guang Dong Video - Region 0 - PAL -
LEFT vs. Mei-Ah Entertainment - Region 0 - NTSC -
RIGHT)
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Screen Captures
(Guang Dong Video - Region 0 - PAL - TOP vs. Mei-Ah Entertainment - Region 0 - NTSC - BOTTOM)
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(Guang Dong Video - Region 0 - PAL - TOP vs. Mei-Ah Entertainment - Region 0 - NTSC - BOTTOM)
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(Guang Dong Video - Region 0 - PAL - TOP vs. Mei-Ah Entertainment - Region 0 - NTSC - BOTTOM)
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(Guang Dong Video - Region 0 - PAL - TOP vs. Mei-Ah Entertainment - Region 0 - NTSC - BOTTOM)
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(Guang Dong Video - Region 0 - PAL - TOP vs. Mei-Ah Entertainment - Region 0 - NTSC - BOTTOM)
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(Guang Dong Video - Region 0 - PAL - TOP vs. Mei-Ah Entertainment - Region 0 - NTSC - BOTTOM)
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(Guang Dong Video - Region 0 - PAL - TOP vs. Mei-Ah Entertainment - Region 0 - NTSC - BOTTOM)
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Report Card:
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Image: |
Mei-Ah |
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Sound: |
Mei-Ah (Guang Dong DTS is dubbed) |
| Extras: | |
| Menu: | Mei-Ah |
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