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« The next Oscar Night will be March 12th, 2023 | Main | Review: Haley Lu Richardson and Owen Teague in 'Montana Story' »
Thursday
May122022

Hit Me With Your Best Shot: Happy Together (1997)

by Nathaniel R 

I first saw Wong Kar Wai's Happy Together at an arthouse cinema in Utah where I went to college. Though enthralled by its saturated colors and amazing performances, it left me very depressed. I had only been out for a couple of years, was wildly inexperienced with relationships, and chafed a bit at "sad gays" in the movies. Mostly because they were the only kind of cinematic gays regularly on offer back then. Nevertheless I devoured the "New Queer Cinema" of the 1990s wherever I could find it (i.e. arthouse theaters or Blockbuster rentals). And this particular movie lingered. I thought about it often. Seeing it again in 2022, twenty-five years after its Cannes premiere, it felt brand new. It wasn't... but 25 years of life experience later, it was. It wasn't devoted to gay misery as I'd remembered but merely a fascinating emotionally precise account of a particular romance. Not that the title isn't wildly ironic.

"Starting over means different things to him," is one of the saddest lines ever spoken in a movie and it hits early...

Bronze medal. The body language and physical acting in this scene -- they way they do and don't look at each other -- is nothing short of genius.

The movie's first act is mostly in black and white (though Christopher Doyle's genius cinematography comes fully to life with his extraordinary facility with color). In the first 22 minutes Lai Yiu-Fai (Tony Leung) narrates his most recent breakup with Ho Po-wing (the late great Leslie Cheung). He's fully aware that this breakup won't last and oddly is resigned to getting back together even before he's asked. As soon as Ho Po-wing has suggested they 'start over,' the movie shifts brilliantly to intoxicating color. For the rest of the ecomonical but gloriously full movie (so much character and feeling in 96 minutes) Wong Kar Wai and his actors chart the very last "on and off" in this painfully "off and on again" toxic relationship.

Wong Kar-Wai's visual strategies are rich and varied, and paired with the amazing performances from two of his earliest muses, they get at ineffable truths about unhappy couples. One of the techniques he uses frequently is the camera pulling away from one character to another with the focus shifting. Here is an example from the films first act. Fai is working as a doorman at a bar and Po-wing keeps showing up there to flaunt his new White sugar daddies and anger his ex. In this shot Po-wing drives away from a dazed Fai who is watching him (no words are exchanged) and noticeably does not turn to see his sad ex's reaction until the man is totally swallowed up, out of focus against blurry streetlights.

Here's one with a similar if less emphatic camera movement, which also leaves Fai behind but the new focus is a kitschy waterfall lamp that the characters are always looking at. It's one of those visual metaphors that is perfect precisely because of its thundering obviousness. Tourist merchandise is not subtle and neither is this constant reminder that this couple just can't get it together and make it work; they are never going to visit that waterfall together. 

Both shots sting with the disconnect between the men, once physically and once spiritually.

The most ravishing repeated technique in the color portion of the movie is more mysterious but also non-verbal. The next two shots absolutely vibrate with feeling and motion.

gold medal - nathaniel's choice for best shot

The emotional wallop is in their circular nature. The taxi ride above, which coincides with getting back together --  "let's start again" -- reads almost like a Merry-Go-Round with its swirling lights. Fai is always in cars or buses or, as in the shot above, a boat, but he's never actually getting anywhere. He's stuck in Argentina and for all his physical and verbal objections, paralyzed by this romance.

The shot directly above, which is longer in context and ravishingly moving is my choice for Best Shot. The moment is kind of free floating (we're given no explanation or where he is going or why he is on a boat) and could theoretically have been dropped anywhere in the movie, since Fai keeps repeating himself, but it's perfect exactly where it is. It's ineffably sad and almost elementally exhausted.

Even the one solitary glimpse we get of the couple looking genuinely happy, dancing in the kitchen -- the only shot in the film where they're both smiling -- the doomed couple is moving in circles. 

How can this man get unstuck and break the cycle? How can he find future happiness when he's continously thinking of the broken dreams? 

silver medal choice - best shot

Let's just say I was triggered in ways both painful and cathartic and happy. At the risk of sharing too much, I watched this masterful film just days after receiving terribly sad news about an ex with whom I had had a very long relationship. All relationships are different and no movie will ever be an exact approximation of your own experience, blissful or miserable or anywhere inbetween. But watching Happy Together after real life heartbreak and experience is a shock. It conjures real truth and then illuminates it from within; that glow isn't just the color palette or the breathtaking cinematography. You can love someone... and they can love you back... and it can still prove an unhappy union. You can get stuck in patterns you'd never imagine for yourself. And even your own memories can be disorienting. One melancholy masterstroke is the way Fai remembers a scene we witnessed as miserable and describes it as a time they were happiest. Are the memories from our failed relationships distorted to ease the pain or do they merely hold contradictory truths?

But you can become unstuck, as Fai does, returning to Hong Kong his heart finally open to something new. The past is always a part of us but it isn't the end of the story.

On the first date with my boyfriend of almost two years now (time flies!) when he learned how movie obsessed I was, he mentioned that he loved Wong Kar-Wai movies. The first gift I gave him, about a year ago, was Criterion's Wong Kar Wai box set. This is the first time we'd watched one together. He asked if I was doing okay, a half hour into the movie, knowing that I'd been reeling from the news and the movie was obviously getting to me. The truth is that the movie hit me like it never had before. It also picked me back up as only great cathartic art can. 

Next up: EX-MACHINA (2014) on Tuesday May 24th. Pick a shot and join us!

 

MORE VISUAL CHOICES FROM "HAPPY TOGETHER" FROM THE BEST SHOT CLUB
Click on the image to read why they chose it!

FINOKE'S CHOICE

RONALD'S CHOICE


GEORGE'S CHOICE

BEN'S CHOICECHRISTIAN'S CHOICE

RYAN'S CHOICE

CLÁUDIO'S CHOICE

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Reader Comments (12)

Thanks for sharing such a personal reaction to this lovely film. My early experience was similar to your own. I was not a huge fan the first time i saw this either and each time i see it, my appreciation grows. I absolutely loved it this time. My memory is that young gay me was disappointed that the gay couple was so unhappy, yelling and fighting, when what i wanted was something like "Beautiful Thing" with boys slow dancing (a scene that came to mind when seeing the scene Claudio chose above).

May 13, 2022 | Registered CommenterSFOTroy

Your bronze was my best. Unfortunately, i guess you didn’t see my tag on Twitter. Nevertheless, i knew it’d be my best shot as soon as it appeared onscreen. They tell an entire history with nothing but body language. It was awe-inspiring.

May 13, 2022 | Registered CommenterRonLank

ron -- sorry. added now. so glad you joined. totally agree on the power of that shot.

SFO -- i was a bit embarrassed by my reaction so thank you !

May 13, 2022 | Registered CommenterNATHANIEL R

"Let's be unhappy together" - that's an actual line in Days of Being Wild.

I didn't have the time to see the movie again, but my favorite shot is the timelapse of Buenos Aires. You can read the hours: 20:46.

Like, that's what I call a cinematic universe.

May 13, 2022 | Registered Commentercal roth

Buenos Aires is my favorite city of this planet. You can still go to Bar Sur in San Telmo and see photos from the filming on their walls. I went to visit Buenos Aires because of this movie. Best movie of the 90's, bar none.

May 13, 2022 | Registered Commentercal roth

As a 20-year reader of this blog, I remember The Boyfriend and Monty, the few glimpses of your personal life we've had in these years (but movies are our personal life, right?). I hope he's ok.

May 13, 2022 | Registered Commentercal roth

I watched this again last week to prepare for reading this article and the other posts.

What a beauty! This, and Chungking and Mood, are so insanely rewatchable, somehow both casual/breezy and stately/impactful in every breath.

May 13, 2022 | Registered CommenterMike in Canada

I have been part of this blog site for over 20 yrs. and have loved it. But of late the blogs are so tedious for the average movie watcher. I see, in the huge decline of people who add in the discussions, there seems to also be little interest anymore.

I am so sorry... I love movies but not for such analytical reasons!!

May 13, 2022 | Registered Commenterrdf

Cal -- he actually passed away.

rdf -- the decline in discussions is because of the registration. we had to do that because so many people were harassing each other. we try for a mix of analytical and breezy but perhaps the balance is off of late.

Mike -- it's a neat trick, isn't it?

May 13, 2022 | Registered CommenterNATHANIEL R

This is such a beautiful write-up. I loved reading your observations on more formalistic aspects of moviemaking while also acknowledging the personal reverberations this film had for you. It feels like one of the pieces that made me fall in love with this blog and this series. Why I love this particular film, too. I admire you so much - thank you for letting me be part of the team.

Also, as I think I said on Facebook, I'm very sorry for your loss. Hugs.

May 13, 2022 | Registered CommenterCláudio Alves

This is beautiful, Nathaniel. Thank you for sharing, and I am glad you were able to get some catharsis from this go-around.

May 13, 2022 | Registered CommenterLynn Lee

I adore this movie. Tangentially, you might want to consider this ...

https://harvardfilmarchive.org/exhibitions/lavender-images-lgbtq-movie-posters-from-the-jenni-olson-que

It shows one of the original Happy Together posters ... just gorgeous. And a fascinating read.

May 13, 2022 | Registered CommenterCharlie G
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