Toronto Film Fest: Ang Lee's Lust, Caution Reviewed
RT takes a look at the controversial new film.
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 mixed reaction from the Venice Film Festival (Variety's early review accused it of having "too much caution and too little lust"), they were also curious to see what earned this erotic thriller its NC-17 rating.

Thankfully, all the worry was for naught. Lee's WWII thriller, set in China during the Japanese occupation, is a tense, beautiful, and sexy affair with plenty to recommend it besides the handful of superhot love scenes. With a plot akin to Paul Verhoeven's Black Book (which played at Toronto last year) and the sexual charge of Bernardo Bertolucci's Last Tango in Paris, Lust, Caution reveals the story of a young woman (newcomer Tang Wei) who gets swept up in a scheme to assassinate a Japanese collaborator (2046's Tony Leung).
We first meet Mrs. Mak, she's living the life of the young wife of a rich importer who joins a cunning social circle of mah-jongg-playing housewives with high-ranking husbands in 1940s Shanghai. But Mrs. Mak is really a woman named Wang, the alluring bait in a trap to kill secret service head Mr. Yee. One particular afternoon, she makes a secret phone call from a coffee shop and waits as an unknown plan is set in motion; subsequently, director Lee flashes back to the beginnings of the whole operation, when a small troupe of student actors decide that bloodshed will better serve the country than putting on nationalist plays.
Actress Wei is superb as Wang, who transforms from mousy teenager to stunningly sexual creature as her "performance" as a spy increasingly penetrates her own identity. Lee examines how false guises can seep into his characters' souls in a variety of ways, from the veiled cattiness at the mah-jongg table to cracks in each lover's façade that can be coaxed out only by sexual intimacy.
So, about the sex. It's pretty hot, and very graphic, and at times one wonders how such things are coordinated without being, well, real. But more significant than the salacious details is the fact that every instance of sex, especially Wang and Yee's first, brutal encounter, serves the film. Said initial liaison is built up with such slow anticipation -- Wang enters the apartment, has a look around, takes off her coat -- that by the time she begins to tease Yee we feel his urgent and explosive need for action. And although it does come violently -- a tad hard to watch, even -- it's unquestionably pulse-raising and visceral, and certainly crucial to understanding the attraction and the desperation between the two ill-fated lovers.

Lust, Caution won top honors at the Venice Film Festival, Lee's second Golden Lion in three years (Brokeback Mountain also took that festival's top award). The film is beautifully shot, and its sets and costumes produced in vivid and convincing period detail. Equally impressive is the perfect, evocative, melancholy score by Alexandre Desplat (Oscar-nominated for last year's The Queen, and awarded a Golden Globe for The Painted Veil). Focus Features will distribute the film in limited release September 28.

We first meet Mrs. Mak, she's living the life of the young wife of a rich importer who joins a cunning social circle of mah-jongg-playing housewives with high-ranking husbands in 1940s Shanghai. But Mrs. Mak is really a woman named Wang, the alluring bait in a trap to kill secret service head Mr. Yee. One particular afternoon, she makes a secret phone call from a coffee shop and waits as an unknown plan is set in motion; subsequently, director Lee flashes back to the beginnings of the whole operation, when a small troupe of student actors decide that bloodshed will better serve the country than putting on nationalist plays.
Actress Wei is superb as Wang, who transforms from mousy teenager to stunningly sexual creature as her "performance" as a spy increasingly penetrates her own identity. Lee examines how false guises can seep into his characters' souls in a variety of ways, from the veiled cattiness at the mah-jongg table to cracks in each lover's façade that can be coaxed out only by sexual intimacy.
So, about the sex. It's pretty hot, and very graphic, and at times one wonders how such things are coordinated without being, well, real. But more significant than the salacious details is the fact that every instance of sex, especially Wang and Yee's first, brutal encounter, serves the film. Said initial liaison is built up with such slow anticipation -- Wang enters the apartment, has a look around, takes off her coat -- that by the time she begins to tease Yee we feel his urgent and explosive need for action. And although it does come violently -- a tad hard to watch, even -- it's unquestionably pulse-raising and visceral, and certainly crucial to understanding the attraction and the desperation between the two ill-fated lovers.

Lust, Caution won top honors at the Venice Film Festival, Lee's second Golden Lion in three years (Brokeback Mountain also took that festival's top award). The film is beautifully shot, and its sets and costumes produced in vivid and convincing period detail. Equally impressive is the perfect, evocative, melancholy score by Alexandre Desplat (Oscar-nominated for last year's The Queen, and awarded a Golden Globe for The Painted Veil). Focus Features will distribute the film in limited release September 28.
Related Items
| Movie: | Lust, Caution |
| The Painted Veil | |
| The Queen | |
| Black Book | |
| Last Tango in Paris | |
| 2046 | |
| Brokeback Mountain | |
| Celeb: | Alexander Desplat |
| Tang Wei | |
| Bernardo Bertolucci | |
| Paul Verhoeven | |
| Ang Lee | |
| Tony Leung Chiu-Wai |
|
on Sep 11 2007 02:21 PM I still dont understand how this got mixed reviews at Venice and yet took home the top prize, is that not a contradiction. I guess what's also a contradiction is that this was filmed in Shanghai, yet I guarantee it will be forever banned in Mainland China. (Reply to this) |
|
on Sep 11 2007 03:12 PM Probably no banned, but it has to go through severe cuttings. Chinese censors are okay with showing violence on scree, but anyting that is sexual, political or attacks the communist will get immediate banning. (Reply to this) |
|
on Sep 11 2007 09:12 PM In reply to this comment (#1115570) that's what i was wondering too. (Reply to this) |
|
on Sep 12 2007 11:29 AM You gotta love Ang Lee, the guy isn't afraid to take on any kind of project. The Ice Storm, Crouching Tiger, Heck, I didn't even mind The Hulk too much. Look forward to seeing Lust,Caution. (Reply to this) |
Related Links
Related Articles
- Toronto Film Fest: Joy Division, Battle in Seattle Purchased 3
- Toronto Film Fest: Eastern Promises Takes Audience Award 14
- Toronto Film Fest: An Interview with Atonement Director Joe Wright 3
- Toronto Film Fest: Why Your Boyfriend Won't See Across the Universe 30
- Toronto Film Fest: Margot at the Wedding, Nothing is Private Reviews 5
- RTIndie: TIFF Acquisitions Include Controversial, Political Films 2
- TIFF Day 6: In the Valley of Elah, Cassandra’s Dream, Atonement 3
- Toronto Film Fest: The Good, The Bad, and The Better So Far 13
- Toronto Film Fest: Ang Lee's Lust, Caution Reviewed 4
- Toronto Film Fest, Day 4: George A. Romero's Diary of the Dead and Lars and the Real Girl Reviews 4
Most Discussed
- Total Recall: Bill Murray's Best Movies 46
- Critics Consensus: Express Scores, Body of Lies Falls Flat 35
- Weekly Ketchup: Steve Carell to Get Smart again. 32
- Box Office Wrapup: The Dogs Rule Once Again 29
- Box Office Guru Preview: Audiences Surrounded by Lies 9
- Exclusive: Alexandre Aja talks Mirrors and Piranha 3D 8
- RT on DVD: Exclusive Indiana Jones Concept Art, Quantum of Solace DVD News 3
Latest News
- RT on DVD: Exclusive Indiana Jones Concept Art, Quantum of Solace DVD News 2
- Box Office Wrapup: The Dogs Rule Once Again 29
- Weekly Ketchup: Steve Carell to Get Smart again. 32
- Exclusive: Alexandre Aja talks Mirrors and Piranha 3D 8
- Critics Consensus: Express Scores, Body of Lies Falls Flat 35
- Box Office Guru Preview: Audiences Surrounded by Lies 9
- Total Recall: Bill Murray's Best Movies 46
- RT on DVD: The Future of Watchmen, Plus Sleeping Beauty, Touch of Evil Remastered 30
- Exclusive: The Fall - Tarsem's Visual Companion - Part 2 4
- Box Office Guru Wrapup: Chihuahua is Top Dog 42
Latest Interviews
- Exclusive: Alexandre Aja talks Mirrors and Piranha 3D 8
- RT Interview: Jason Statham Chats Death Race, Crank 2 and The Sweeney 9
- Video Exclusive: Gerard Butler talks RocknRolla and 300 sequel with RT 13
- Video Exclusive: Maria Bello, Brendan Fraser and the Mummy 3 Cast Talk to RT 14
- RT goes behind the scenes on Stargate: Continuum 4
- Starship Troopers' Casper Van Dien Shares His Five Favorite Films 48
- RT Interview: Philippe Petit on Crossing the Twin Towers on a Wire 2
- RT Interview: David Duchovny on The X-Files, Californication and Directing 11
- RT Interview: Ben Barnes on Taking on the Journey of Prince Caspian 1
- RT Interview: William Moseley on His Last Narnia Adventure in Prince Caspian 2
Latest Features
- Exclusive: The Fall - Tarsem's Visual Companion - Part 2 4
- Exclusive: The Fall - Tarsem's Visual Companion - Part 1 12
- Five Favorite Films with Paris Hilton 146
- Exclusive: Brand New The Children Photos and Director Introduction 5
- Five Favorite Films with Chuck Palahniuk 38
- Five Favorite Films with Dane Cook 106
- Five Favorite Films with Eva Mendes 51
- What The Hell Happened To ... Cuba Gooding Jr.? 86
- RT's Summer in Review: The Best, The Worst, and Our Favorite Films! 77
- What The Hell Happened To Shannon Elizabeth? 101

