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Rouge (1988) May 13, 2007

Posted by Cal in : Blogroll, Drama, Romance, Supernatural , trackback

Director: Stanley Kwan  Starring: Anita Mui, Leslie Cheung, Emily Chu, Alex Man  Territory: Hong Kong  Production Company: Golden Harvest/Golden Way

In 1934, 12th Master Chan (Leslie Cheung) is a son of a wealthy, high profile businessman.  He becomes increasingly infatuated with concubine Fleur (Anita Mui), who succumbs to the 12th Master’s charms leading the pair to fall hopelessly in love.  However, the match is not blessed by Chan’s parents, who understandably wish for their son to find a more respectable woman to share his life.  Meanwhile, in 1987, a news printer runs into a mysterious woman who is searching for her lost love.

ROUGE won a boatload of awards on its release in 1988 with its sharp script, interesting leads and haunting theme.  It is often regarded as an “art-house” film (whatever THAT means) but the truth is it’s just a superior film that tells a great story in quite a unique way.  Some of the techniques and plot devices are a LITTLE heavy-handed VERY occasionally, but other than that it is free of the usual “arty” clichés that can bog a film down.  In fact, it’s refreshingly free of sentiment and melodrama, and moves at a cracking pace.

Anita Mui and Leslie Cheung - sadly, neither are still with us.

Alex Man and Emily Chu are brilliant as the modern day couple – with the type of practical relationship characteristic of modern times.  The contrast between them and the passion and earnestness of the 12th Master and Fleur is one of the driving points of the film – and definitely one of the elements that really make it work.  The lead characters played by Cheung and Mui are, of course, the focal point of the piece, and it has to be said that they make a convincing couple.  Obviously these days the film is lent a special kind of poignancy as neither of them survived to reach old age, but it remains that this was a classic well before tragedy struck in real life.

One word of warning to newcomers: if you buy the Fortune Star DVD of this film, do not read the back of the box as it gives everything away.  It’s not The Sixth Sense, but this film definitely works better when you know as little as possible about the plot.  When I first saw the film, I knew literally nothing about it, and was blown away.  What I’ve written in the first paragraph of this review is enough (or indeed too much) for you to enter the world of Rouge and come away from the experience knowing that you’ve seen something truly different.

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