In The Mood For Love (Special Edition 2 Disc) [DVD] [2000]
|
| List Price: | £23.99 |
| Price: | £6.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery on orders over £5. Details |
Availability: Usually dispatched within 6 to 10 days
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk
19 new or used available from £5.91
Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #6228 in DVD
- Released on: 2001-10-29
- Rating: Parental Guidance
- Number of discs: 2
- Formats: Anamorphic, Box set, PAL, Special Edition, Widescreen
- Original language: Cantonese Chinese
- Subtitled in: Dutch, English, French, German, Greek, Italian, Spanish
- Number of discs: 2
- Running time: 94 minutes
Editorial Reviews
Special Features
Anamorphic Wide Screen
DVD 9
Cantonese
Region 0
Dolby Digital Cantonese
Dolby Digital
Original Trailer
Film Soundtrack
Fully Scored And Animated Menus
Deleted Scenes
Alternative Ending
Interview With Wong Kar Wai
Wong Kar Wai World Tour
On Set Report
Teaser Trailers
International Trailers
Promotional Trailer Reel
Cast And Crew Biographies
Cast And Crew Filmographies
Poster And Stills Galleries
Costume And Styling Documentaries
Analysis And Reflections On The Music
Promotional Spot For Soundtrack
Composer Biographies
Interactive Mah Jong Game
Recipes
Dutch\English\French\German\Greek\Italian\Spanish
Synopsis
IN THE MOOD FOR LOVE centres around Chow Mo-Wan (Tony Leung) and Su Li-Zhen (Maggie Cheung), neighbors living in a crowded apartment building in 1962 Hong Kong. Both married to people who are always away, they spend many nights home alone. The two make each other's acquaintance and soon find that they have a lot in common: Both enjoy martial arts, frequent the same noodle stand--and eventually discover that their spouses are cheating on them. (Mo-Wan's wife is having an affair with Li-Zhen's husband.) Hurt and angry, they find comfort in their growing friendship even as they resolve not to be like their unfaithful mates.
Wong Kar-Wai's seventh film reunites him with Leung and Cheung, who provide perfectly evocative performances as the two hesitant would-be lovers. A slight departure from his more recent films (in which he used hyperkinetic camera movements to reflect the frenetic pace of modern Hong Kong life), here Wong uses fixed shots and stages static tableaux to capture a lost historical moment. Yet the film is filled with Wong's unique style, with its lush pageantry of colors, sounds, and images. A thoughtful and provocative exploration of memory, tradition, historical change, inevitability, and love, this vivid period piece offers a rich cinematic experience.
Customer Reviews
Beautiful
In The Mood For Love is a film of such outstanding quality that it is difficult to know how to adequately describe it. In terms of cinematography, it is faultless, with the composition of each shot apparently considered equally as fine art. Each scene is constructed with an aesthetic so perfect as to be almost wounding. Having said that, this is a beautifully human film and visual impact is never allowed to overwhelm the narrative. The two principle characters are played with a subtlety and compassion echoed by and understood by the camera.
The alchemy of the achievement is completed by a beautiful soundtrack in which the setting resonates and that keeps the audience in touch with and enchanted by the humanity and tenderness expressed by the two protagonists. Overall the experience is breathtaking. It is hard to think of a better example of the art of filmmaking. A jewel. Absolutely wonderful.
A Hong Kong 'Brief Encounter'
Here is a film that fills all your senses to saturation point, that takes as it's cue the idea that each minute detail in a moment carries equal weight and hat some people do rise above the mundane in their search for love.
Every frame of this film is lovingly prepared and the screen bursts with the vibrancy of its colours whilst keeping the protagonists in an emotional dead calm, where they cannot quite overcome their own sensibilities. Some may indeed find the film slow, perhaps indulgent. But that is to miss the point - when one falls in love on savours every moment, every feeling. Each resonates in our minds and amplifies in our heart to form a new, more powerful memory. When those feelings cannot be acted upon, then life becomes a secret trade in dreams and whispers.
Chow (Tony Leung, as great a presence as Gregory Peck on the screen) and Su Li-zhen (the effortlessly graceful Maggie Cheung)are neighbours in a Hong Kong tenament block. Both are married to spouses we never fully see, just hear in conversations or phone calls. Both appear slightly isolated from their place in the world. Chow dreams of writing kung-fu series for a living whilst Su waits to become a mother. Through a series of quilted scenes (one of the joys of the movie is how scenes are repeated, refracted, revisited and we are never quite sure of the timeline of the story) we learn, just before the characters themselves do, that their spouses are infact having an affair. They are drawn to each other not so much by this but by the loneliness of their spouses' absences. Converstaions are hesistant, filled with silences. The camera prowls around,viewing them from a slightly greater distance than normal. Often half the frame is obscured in the tenament by a door, a desk or a body. We are like the child in Henry James's 'What Maisie Knew', slowly putting together the motion of their romance in our own mind. It is remarkable cinema; the editing only enhances our slight confusion and requires us always to double check our understanding. Kar-wai Wong, together with his cinemaphotographer, takes us ever closer to these people.
Everything about this film is first class; the script is a marvel of concise storytelling and the acting would surely be lauded if it came from two Hollywood stars. The ending is in someways an enigma - but if you like Kieslowski or just great romantic film making you'll find this a film you can wallow in over and over again.
A sumptuous feast of cinematography
The only word for "In the Mood for Love" is sumptuous. The film is set in 1960s Hong Kong and its exquisite cinematography captures the look and feel of the era perfectly - from the steam of the Chinese noodle vendors and formica furniture of the main characters' appartments to the perfect copies of American haistyles and Twiggy-style dresses sported by Maggie Cheung. But there's also a deep sadness to the film, and a sheer electricity between the lead 'couple' that will leave you spellbound - the sexual tension between the two is palpable. It's sensual, tense and engaging stuff: see it.

![In The Mood For Love (Special Edition 2 Disc) [DVD] [2000]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/510JQEWBEKL._SL210_.jpg)

![Zhou Yu's Train [DVD] [2002]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51Z0P2GWX4L._SL75_.jpg)

![Eros [2004] [DVD]](http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/410MKAQ5NWL._SL75_.jpg)