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In the Mood for Love

Page 8

by Tony Rayns


  Deleted scene: Chow and Mrs Chan awkwardly rehearse sex in room 2046

  In the Seventies features scenes shot in Hong Kong before the unit decamped to Bangkok. In 1972, Mrs Chan is still married, and preparing to emigrate to join her husband and son overseas. She is getting ready to sell the apartment she bought from Mrs Suen, and arrives back to find a potential buyer chatting with her maid. The would-be buyer calls herself Lulu (she is apparently a singer from Singapore), but seems more interested in talking about her ‘husband’ Mr Chow and in finding out about Mrs Chan than she is in the apartment. The next scene shows Lulu’s bitter row with Chow in the alley near the building. She has brought him there because she knows (from Ping) that he used to live in the apartment nearby and had feelings for the woman who lives there now. She blames him for never telling her anything himself; he angrily pushes her out of his life, saying he never asked her to follow him. The third scene shows Mrs Chan, in slowed motion, going to the daibaitong for noodles – and still overdressing for the occasion, this time in a scarlet dress with a large fur collar. In the daibaitong, she finds Chow eating. The final scene starts with Mrs Chan on the phone to her husband (‘It’s very cold in Hong Kong’) and ends with her asleep on her sofa.

  And The Secret Reunion in Angkor Wat features a chance encounter in the ruins between Chow and Mrs Chan, both there as tourists with groups. He says that he’s now working in Vietnam. She says her husband is in Phnom Penh, discussing a new business venture, and not worried about the threat of war in the country. She mentions that Ping is about to marry a Miss Singapore. They part with a handshake, but he calls after her with one last question: did she ever try to call him? She says she doesn’t remember. Chow is then seen placing a red, heart-shaped locket (seen once before in these ‘deleted scenes’) in the Angkor Wat wall before he whispers into it. Wong doesn’t offer any commentary over these scenes but he told me in 2000 that he shot them only because Maggie Cheung was so eager to join the unit in Angkor Wat: ‘She even volunteered to come along as the stills photographer … since she was there, we thought we might as well do something with her.’

  ***

  Wong Kar Wai has always had a liking for colourful supporting characters, and Chow’s hard-drinking, hard-gambling, hard-whoring colleague Ping is one of his best. The character is played by Siu Ping-Lam, in real life one of the film’s props men. Wong created the character for him midway through the original Hong Kong shoot, liking his ‘Sixties look’. Ping tells Chow in the finished film that he’s an ordinary guy and doesn’t have secrets, but his conversation with Mrs Chan in the deleted scenes starts with him telling her secrets about his chequered love life. Siu entered the Hong Kong film industry in the 1980s as a props man and had worked for Wong on Days of Being Wild, Ashes of Time, Fallen Angels and Happy Together, as well as such films as A Chinese Ghost Story (1987) for Ching Siu-Tung and Green Snake (1993) for Tsui Hark. He had never acted before, but reprised his role as Ping in 2046.

  Siu Ping-Lam as Ah Ping

  Wong had form with this kind of casting. The manager of the Midnight Express snack counter in Chungking Express was played by ‘Piggy’ Chan, the film’s stills photographer.

  ***

  Cannes Film Festival, May 2001. One year on from his success with In the Mood for Love, Wong is invited back to give what the festival calls a ‘Leçon de cinéma’ but what you or I would call a sit-down Q&A with Gilles Ciment. The text of their conversation is usefully printed in Peter Brunette’s book Wong Kar-wai (Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2005). Before the session, Wong screens a previously unseen short film: In the Mood for Love 2001, again starring Maggie Cheung and Tony Leung. He says that it was shot before he made the feature, over two days and nights in Hong Kong, and was based on one of the original ideas for Summer in Beijing.

  I saw this short only once, some fifteen years ago, and didn’t take notes – so I don’t remember it that clearly. It has never been released on DVD or Blu-ray, possibly because Wong didn’t clear the rights to use Bryan Ferry’s version of the Jimmy McHugh–Dorothy Fields song ‘I’m in the Mood for Love’ on the soundtrack. (However, there is a music video for the Bryan Ferry cover version on YouTube which uses shots and out-takes from In the Mood for Love and is credited to Wong and Jet Tone.) I recall that the short was set entirely in a 7/11 convenience store, that its plot hinged on a bet of some sort about food, and that it was very amusing. Most likely it will never be shown again, although its slim storyline was inflated to become the basis for Wong’s My Blueberry Nights.

  Credits

  Huayang Nianhua/In

  the Mood for Love

  Hong Kong/France 2000

  Directed by

  Wong Kar Wai

  Produced by

  Wong Kar Wai

  Executive Producer

  Chan Ye-Cheng

  Associate Producer

  Jacky Pang

  [Pang Yee-Wah]

  ©2000, Block 2 Pictures

  Production Company

  Block 2 Pictures [Chunguang Yinghua] and Paradis Films present a Jet Tone Films production

  Production Manager

  Law Kam-Chuen

  Production Supervisor

  Wong Lai-Tak

  Assistant Producer

  Chan Wai-Si

  Screenplay

  Wong Kar Wai

  Quoted Writer

  Liu Yi-Chang

  Directors of

  Photography

  Christopher Doyle

  Mark Lee [Li Pingbin]

  Additional

  Cinematography

  Kwan Pun-Leung

  Yu Lik-Wai

  Lai Yiu-Fai

  Chan Kwong-Hung

  Camera Assistant

  Lai Yiu-Fai

  Lighting Assistant

  Kwan Wing-Cheung

  Camera Crew

  Ho Kin-Kwong

  Ho Ka-Fai

  Lau Tin-Wah

  Chief Editor

  William Chang

  [Chang Suk-Ping]

  Editor

  Chan Kei-Hap

  Production Designer

  William Chang

  [Chang Suk-Ping]

  Art Director

  Man Lim-Chung

  Assistant Art Director

  Lui Fung-Saan

  Props Master

  Wong Chi-On

  Props Men

  Tang Nau-Wah

  Chan Ching-Nau

  Siu Ping-Lam

  Make-up

  Kwan Kei-Noh

  Assistant Make-up

  Lui Si-Wing

  Hair Design

  Wong Kwok-Hung

  Hairdresser

  Luk Ha-Fong

  Gaffer

  Wong Chi-Ming

  Electricians

  Chan Hon-Sung

  Kwan Wing-Kin

  Assistant Directors

  Siu Wai-Keung

  Kong Yeuk-Sing

  Continuity

  Yu Haw-Yan

  Sound Design

  Tu Duu-Chih [Du Duzhi]

  Pong Asvinikul

  Sound Recordists

  Kuo Li-Chi

  Tang Shiang-Chu

  Liang Chi-Da

  Original Music

  Michael Galasso

  Other Music

  ‘Yumeji’s Theme’ by Umebayashi Shigeru ‘Aquellos ojos verdes’ by L. W. Gilbert and N. Menendez, sung by Nat King Cole ‘Te quiero dijiste’ by Marie Grever, sung by Nat King Cole ‘Quizas, quizas, quizas’ by Osvaldo Ferres, sung by Nat King Cole ‘Huayang de Nianhua’ by Chen Minxin, sung by Zhou Xuan The film’s end credits also list several other vintage Chinese songs and excerpts from traditional Chinese operas, but (with the exception of a short percussive clip from a Cantonese opera) none of them is actually heard in the finished film.

  Some do appear in the ‘Making of’ documentary @ In the Mood for Love, which, incidentally, reveals how Wong Kar Wai at some stage thought of using them.

  Visual Con
sultant

  (Post-production)

  Calmen Lui

  Stills Photographer

  Wing Shya

  Video Documentation

  Kwan Pun-Leung

  Amos Lee

  English Subtitles

  Tony Rayns

  James Tsim

  Thailand Crew: Production Co-ordinator

  William Lim Heong

  Production Manager

  Parichart Khumrod

  Assistant Producer

  Rattana Pulsawan

  Production Assistant

  Samerjai Bhoukird

  Assistant Location

  Manager

  Satt Thepsawad

  Props Master

  Narong Osaypan

  Props Man

  Aunnop Wungbon

  Interpreters

  Alice Chan

  Shirley Chan

  Choi Yu-Yuk

  CAST Maggie Cheung [Cheung Man-Yuk]

  Mrs Chan, née Su Lizhen

  Tony Leung

  [Leung Chiu-Wai]

  Chow Mo-Wan

  Rebecca Pan Mrs Suen

  Lai Chin

  Mr Ho

  Siu Ping-Lam

  Ping

  Chin Tsi-Ang

  the Amah

  Chan Man-Lui

  Mr Koo

  Koo Kam-Wah

  Mrs Koo

  Sun Jia-Jun

  (voice appearance)

  Mrs Chow

  Roy Cheung

  (voice appearance)

  Mr Chan

  Cheung Tung-Joe

  New owner of

  Mr Koo’s apartment

  Screen ratio: 1.66:1 Running time: 97 minutes 58 seconds Colour, stereo

 

 

 


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