Lost in Beijing (Variety Review, uncensored version)

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Lost in Beijing (Variety Review, uncensored version)

Postby dleedlee » Mon Feb 12, 2007 12:05 pm

Lost in Beijing
Pingguo
(China )

A Laurel Films production. (International sales: Films Distribution, Paris.) Produced by Fang Li. Executive producer, Fang.
Directed by Li Yu. Screenplay, Li, Fang Li; story, Fang, Li.

With: Tony Leung Ka-fai, Fan Bingbing, Tong Dawei, Elaine Jin, Zeng Meihuizi.
(International version, Mandarin dialogue)


By DEREK ELLEY


This review is based on the Market screening of the international version, not the version that will screen in Competition on Friday night.
Money (and maybe a little bit of love) makes the world go around in "Lost in Beijing," an involving, highly accessible portrait of an emotional menage a quatre in the modern-day Chinese capital. Third feature by Mainland writer-director Li Yu reps a striking career fulfilment by the 30-something former documaker, following her rough but groundbreaking lesbian pic "Fish and Elephant" (2001), and accomplished but Euro-style drama "Dam Street" two years ago. Though pic is facing censorship difficulties within China, specialized distribution, plus robust fest travel, means "Lost" won't stay lost for offshore viewers.

As of early February, there were still doubts whether the movie would make it (and in what form) into Berlin's competition for its skedded Feb. 16 screening, due to demands by China's Film Bureau for a reported 10 minutes or so of cuts before getting official permission to attend. However, version reviewed here is the full international one, already screened in the fest's Market and being sold internationally by Paris-based Films Distribution. Producer-writer Fang Li co-produced last year's "Summer Palace," which earned helmer Lou Ye a five-year ban for competing, unauthorized, in the Cannes fest. But apart from censorship hoo-ha, there's no comparison between the two pictures, especially on an artistic level.

Pre-publicity centered largely on the sex scenes in "Lost." In fact, (a) pic has no frontal nudity apart from a blink-and-you'd-miss-it sighting of the lead actress' nipple, and (b) all three of the early sex scenes (romantic lovemaking under a shower, a semi-rape, and rough marital sex) are dramatically justified and visually soft-core. Trimming any would weaken but not capsize the movie, as "Lost" has way more going for it than just that.

It's also likely that Chinese censors are equally discomforted by other content, in particular a scene where a doctor is shown accepting a bribe to change a crucial birth certificate.

Title sequence, to light piano tinklings by composer Peyman Yazdanian ("Summer Palace"), sketches the high-rise, construction-heavy skyline of contempo Beijing before plunging into the world of Lin Dong (Hong Kong vet Tony Leung Ka-fai), a nouveau-riche entrepreneur from the southern province of Guangdong who runs the Golden Basin Foot Massage Parlour. Among his staff of girls are Liu Pingguo (Fan Bingbing) and Xiaomei (Zeng Meihuizi), both from the same small northeastern town who've come to make it in the big city.

After getting drunk with Xiaomei, Pingguo ends up in the apartment of Dong, where he clumsily forces himself on her. In a scene which, like several in the movie, marbles drama with light, absurdist comedy, Pingguo's husband, window-cleaner An Kun (Tong Dawei), sees them making it from his harness outside the building. Later, Kun has rough sex with Pingguo to exorcise his anger; more comically, he also rips the hood ornament off Dong's beloved Mercedes-Benz in revenge.

But it's money that turns out to be the common language between Kun and Dong as they settle their differences. When Pingguo finds she's pregnant, all parties, including Dong's barren wife, beauty-parlor owner Wang Mei (Taiwan vet Elaine Jin), sign contracts. Dong, who's desperate for a child, will adopt the child, Kun and Pingguo will get substantial coin, and Mei will get 50% of her husband's assets if he ever fools around again.

Script then weaves a complex fabric of emotional ties and business arangements that bind the two couples into a kind of mutually dependent, extended family. In the meantime, unknown to their partners, Mei forces Kun to sexually service her on a regular basis.

When Pingguo gives birth to a daughter, Dong, convinced the child is his, turns into a devoted, gleeful parent. As emotional ties become blurred between the four, Pingguo finds she can't give up the child, despite all the money and contracts.

Pics about modern China's money-obsessed society, and immigrants making it in the big city, are hardly new -- from "Far From Home" to last year's excellent "Luxury Car." But "Lost" takes a new tack, neither focusing per se on the protags' out-of-town status nor venturing into any dark, violent territory. Tight script omits any unnecessary connecting material and carves believable characters making a go of it in the only ways they know.

Four main thesps are aces, from Leung's almost childlike entrepreneur, through Jin's bitter, waspish wife, to Tong's boyish husband. As Pingguo (pic's Chinese title, meaning "Apple"), up-and-coming Fan, good in recent costume actioner "A Battle of Wits," convincingly blends provincial toughness with maternal softness.

Shot in bright clear colors, with plenty of handheld camerawork, film has a totally different visual style from helmer Li's burnished, ultra-composed "Dam Street." All other tech credits are top class.

Camera (color), Wang Yu; editor, Zeng Jian; music, Peyman Yazdanian; art director, Liu Weixin; costumes, Xu Zhen; sound (Dolby Digital), Lai Qizhen, Wang Xueyi; assistant director, Bao Zhenjiang. Reviewed at Berlin Film Festival (Market), Feb. 10, 2007. Running time: 113 MIN.

http://www.variety.com/index.asp?layout ... 6&nid=2853
???? Better to light a candle than curse the darkness; Measure twice, cut once.
Pinyin to Wade-Giles. Cantonese names file
dleedlee
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