Some directors wouldn't know a true love story if it smacked them in the face like a big sloppy kiss.
2046 (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:106
Fresh:89
Rotten:17
Average Rating:7.4/10
Consensus: Director Wong Kar-Wai has created in 2046 another visually stunning, atmospheric, and melancholy movie about unrequited love and loneliness.
Theatrical Release:Aug 5, 2005 Limited
Box Office: $1,237,566
Synopsis: Director Wong Kar-Wai's style reaches its fullest expression in his stunning film 2046. Picture-perfect period sets and costuming, finely wrought atmosphere, languid shots, glamorous cigarette... Director Wong Kar-Wai's style reaches its fullest expression in his stunning film 2046. Picture-perfect period sets and costuming, finely wrought atmosphere, languid shots, glamorous cigarette smoke, amber lamplight, and allusions to film noir. 2046 is a meditation on memory, eroticism, love, loss, and longing which surpasses the director's beautiful, widely acclaimed IN THE MOOD FOR LOVE (2000) in terms of formal ambition and visual sumptuousness. With its intriguing, layered structure, the film follows the adventures of Chow Wo Man (Tony Leung), a womanizer who is writing a science fiction novel about a future year in which all memories are suspended. The film shuttles between the BLADE RUNNER-like world of Chow's futuristic novel (complete with androids and other metaphors of emotional disconnection) and late-'60s Hong Kong--where Chow writes from a hotel room, and engages in relationships with a series of beautiful, complex women (including the luminous trio of Gong Li, Zhang Ziyi, and Faye Wong). The film also journeys to Singapore and through the increasingly mysterious corridors of the protagonist's memory. 2046 resists tidy plot summaries with its disjointed, zigzagging construction. Yet, coupled with Wong's rich cinematography and dazzling formal techniques, it is as fluid, associative, and labyrinthine as memory itself. Sliding between keenly detailed realism (Wong's camera can capture the subtlest flicker of emotion in a characters' eyes) and lavish, expressionistic metaphor, the film is a deeply entrancing experience. Even given its jumbled, sometimes chaotic narrative, 2046 creates a poignant, emotionally charged, and richly rewarding experience. [More]
Starring: Tony Leung, Gong Li, Zhang Ziyi, Faye Wong
Starring: Tony Leung, Gong Li, Zhang Ziyi, Faye Wong, Maggie Cheung, Dong Jie, Carina Lau
Director: Wong Kar-Wai
Director: Wong Kar-Wai
Screenwriter: Wong Kar-Wai
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
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Reviews for 2046
What we seem to have here in 2046 is a meditation on past loves, not to mention missed communication, bad love affairs, bad timing, roads not taken and the passage of time itself. It all sucks, doesn't it? Great soundtrack, though.
Quite simply an incomparably sublime work of art, a triumph of lyricism over narrative in the cinema, and the most exquisite homage to the beauty of women it has ever been my privilege to witness on the screen.
Someday, [Wong's] mountingly baroque dreamtime methods are bound to implode in an apocalyptic Wile E. Coyote fashion. But not yet.
...creates the sort of dreamy, drifting, reflective mood that Wong is a master at.
Wong's admirers, like those of Stanley Kubrick, thrill to his visual dictatorship, but in both instances the inquiry into passion can seem a weirdly impassive affair.
This intriguing blend of nostalgia, science fiction, and timeless melancholy will still be haunting viewers in 2046 and beyond.
No one else making films today..surveys the landscape of the heart with the sensitivity, delicacy, and depth that Wong brings to 2046.
Wong offers an artful meditation on the nature of love, making effective use of color schemes (yellows, greens and reds), placid shotmaking and diverse music to deliver a sultry portrait of postwar Hong Kong.
It’s inviting and alluring, even if the director himself seems less interested in the answers to the questions he poses than the form his queries take.
This vortex of déjà vu, fantasy and regret is about Chow rewriting his memories so that his romance is an endless elegy for love that could have been . . . visually rapturous.
Not just a deeply sad movie, but one whose every image seems haunted.
A gorgeous, fevered dream of a movie that blends recollection, imagination and temporal dislocation to create an emotional portrait of chaos in the aftermath of heartbreak.
Latest News for 2046
September 11, 2007:
Toronto Film Fest: Ang Lee's Lust, Caution Reviewed
Among the higher profile entries in Toronto, Ang Lee's Lust, Caution had a particular notoriety coming in; not only were fest-watchers waiting to confirm or contradict the early... More...
November 01, 2006:
Fantastic New Pics from Yimou's "Golden Flower"
I'll keep this short and sweet: If you're a fan of movies like "Hero" and "House of Flying Daggers," you probably have a rather large interest in seeing... More...
September 05, 2006:
Trailer Bulletin: Zhang Yimou's "Curse of the Golden Flower"
Yimou Zhang, the man who brought you "Hero" and "House of Flying Daggers," has another epic adventure in the works. The new one is called "Curse of the... More...
May 26, 2006:
Wong Kar Wai to Make English-Language Debut with Solid Ensemble
Seems like a lot of high-end actors are lining up to star in Wong Kar Wai's "My Blueberry Nights," a romantic drama that's attracted names like Kevin Spacey, Ed... More...
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