From the daily archives:

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Le Voyage du Ballon Rouge (The Voyage of the Red Balloon)

Le Voyage du Ballon Rouge (Director: Hou Hsiao-hsien): I have to admit that as much as I’m familiar with Hou Hsiao-hsien’s name, I hadn’t seen any of his pre­vious films (Three Times (2005) and Café Lumiere (2003) being the most recent). That being said, someone I know told me that in his opinion, most of Hou’s best work was from the 80s and 90s and is actu­ally pretty hard to find. Setting the film in Paris was admit­tedly a gamble, and deciding to make a sort of homage to Albert Lamarisse’s classic children’s film La Ballon Rouge (1956) an even bigger one. For me, anyway, it didn’t pay off.

We’re dropped into a story with very little expos­i­tion. Juliette Binoche plays Suzanne, a voice actor for a puppet theatre and a har­ried single mom. Her son, Simon, is watched by a new nanny, Song Fang, who just hap­pens to be both Chinese and a film stu­dent making a film. So, with an obvious dir­ect­orial stand-in in place, what hap­pens? Not too much. Song uses Simon in her film pro­ject which is very much like the classic film, and we see footage scattered throughout the rest of the main film including, some­what con­fus­ingly, at the very begin­ning, before we’ve even met the char­ac­ters. There are also scenes where the tit­ular orb floats out­side the apart­ment when Song is not actu­ally filming. I found its pres­ence baff­ling most of the time, and the film, like the lives it por­trays, as scattered and uneven, though well-intentioned. Suzanne’s living arrange­ments are messy and her rela­tion­ships unclear, and by the end of the film, there’s really no sense of res­ol­u­tion. What I did like about the film was its won­derful use of nat­ural light, as well as the cor­res­ponding nat­ur­al­ness of the dia­logue, with char­ac­ters repeating dia­logue not heard the first time by other char­ac­ters, and other real­istic touches.

But in the end, I wasn’t really moved. My bal­loon, instead of taking flight, just slowly deflated over the film’s 113 minutes.

Trailer

6/10(6/10)

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