Laid-back hairdresser Louie (Jordan Chan) and his kind-hearted transgender mother (Lau Kar Ying) take in the bereaved, deeply depressed but beautiful Aggie (Yasuko Tomita) to give her new ho... Read allLaid-back hairdresser Louie (Jordan Chan) and his kind-hearted transgender mother (Lau Kar Ying) take in the bereaved, deeply depressed but beautiful Aggie (Yasuko Tomita) to give her new hope and a new family. With their unconditional support, she learns to blossom as a person a... Read allLaid-back hairdresser Louie (Jordan Chan) and his kind-hearted transgender mother (Lau Kar Ying) take in the bereaved, deeply depressed but beautiful Aggie (Yasuko Tomita) to give her new hope and a new family. With their unconditional support, she learns to blossom as a person and follow her dreams out into the wide world. Romance simmers - yet fails to break the sur... Read all
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unlike most films out of HK, constantly keeps one on one's toes. Never can tell which way the film is going to twist, as warps each and every cliche as they rear their heads.
well recommended and then some.
Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
Sound format: Mono
Bernardo Bertolucci once said: "Movies are made with the same material dreams are made of". As evidence, one might look no further than Yim Ho's unexpectedly beguiling KITCHEN, the tale of a womanising hairstylist (Jordan Chan) and his transsexual 'mother' (Law Kar-ying) whose lives are changed irrevocably by the arrival of a beautiful orphaned houseguest (Yasuko Tomita). Aided and abetted by the magnificent, sensuous visuals conjured by master cinematographer Poon Hang-sang, Yim's simple tale explores the consequences of bereavement on the inevitable relationship that develops between Chan and Tomita. However, their mutual platonic obsession is ultimately defeated by time and circumstances, and the film closes quietly on a scene of domestic bliss, threads untied, passions unconsummated. Yim explored similar emotional territory several years earlier in the rural drama THE DAY THE SUN TURNED COLD (1994), but here, his themes have been tempered by the warmth of the characterisations. Chan and Law are effortlessly good, but Tomita carries the film with demure grace. An early scene, in which she's found on a rooftop overlooking Hong Kong at night, expressing her silent, wordless grief over the death of her grandmother by reaching for the moon, is quite genuinely heartbreaking. Elsewhere, the film's long middle section, detailing events surrounding another unexpected tragedy, is a little too leisurely and could have been trimmed without significant loss, but the bookends are magnificent and the images are never less than ravishing. You'll be humming the wistful, nursery-rhyme theme music for days afterward.
Despite its languid pacing, the original 124-minute version is the preferred cut, rather than the 112-minute 'international' print which tampers with the narrative flow. Thankfully, the longer version seems to have prevailed in most major markets, especially on home video.
(Cantonese dialogue)
nevertheless, distanced from the book the film is still pleasing to watch, the grace of the visuals typically that of a slightly avant garde hong kong filmmaker, and as such the film tends to suffer slightly from a lack of substance, this is partly to be blamed on the screenplay. the majority of the emotional depth comes from the mother, who to be fair, was always going to be very difficult to portray on screen but is here accomplished very well. in my opinion, the scene of aggie on the rooftop which was mentioned in a previous review as being singularly demonstrative of aggie's gried seems contrived and trite compared to the reserved and less overt sadness carried by loui's mother in every scene she appears in, even when expressing joy the undercurrent of the loss he/she feels for her wife is manifest at all times; physically in her transformation into a woman.
this is a dreamy little wisp of a movie, whilst neither profound or a tour de force of acting, but if u like quirky little movies like this, then this is very well realised and i can say that i like it despite its flaws. the book can be film better; having seen in the mood for love, wong kar wai seems to be the man for the job though i doubt he will have time for it.
Director Ho Yim manages to let Jordan Chan and Yasuka Tomita to show some of their true selves within the characters they portray. The result is two commendable performances and a great on screen chemistry.
'Kitchen' is a very slow film, taking a long time to travel little distance, which may not appeal to some. But those who are patient will be in for a treat. Slow dreamy crane shots, gentle picturesque scenes, and some surreal changes of pace. Well worth investing two hours of your time.
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