"All About Love."
Bottom Line: A could-be pleasant alternative to standard rom-com gets lost in a didactic shuffle.
BUSAN, South Korea --
Hong Kong filmmaker Ann Hui has made half a
career out of taking the
city's social politics to task, and she
does it again with "All About
Love," an almost romantic comedy
about four lesbian friends, two
one-night stands that end in
pregnancies and the men that find a way
to be fit into their
lives.
With homosexuality being decriminalized in Hong Kong for just over
two
decades and families increasingly being labeled alternative,
the
material is timely. But unlike "Night and Day," which managed
to tap
into the complexities of the marginalized (if somewhat
melodramatically), "Love" drowns in its own politics and winds
up
sending mixed messages that are best left unsent.
Women's and LGBT-themed festivals are likely to take notice,
particularly with director Hui's name above the title, but the
chances
of much beyond art house releases outside Asia, if that,
looks
unlikely.
Forty-something former lovers Macy (comedy veteran Sandra Ng) and
Anita
(Hong Kong's long-absent favorite glamour girl, Vivian Chow)
reconnect
by chance when both find themselves pregnant after spur
of the moment
one-night flings. Although both are confused as to
what they're
feeling and how to proceed, they do manage to renew
their shaky bond
with each other. While Anita considers terminating
her pregnancy, Macy
offers her righteously indignant lesbian
friends Eleanor (Joey Man)
and Wai (Jo Kuk) the option of adopting
her child.
But when the
fathers (Eddie Cheung and William Chan) get wind of
the plans, they
force themselves into all four women's lives and
the hijinks ensue.
Or they should ensue.
"All About Love" has flashes of wit and some
earnestly charming
moments, but those are buried under piles of
distracting polemics
and some disturbingly misguided "comedy."
Dialogue that's supposed
to sound like casual lounge conversation is
littered with words
like "patriarchal" and "heterosexual hegemony."
Robert, the
already-married father of bisexual Macy's baby, has a
penchant for
domestic abuse that stems from her excessive shopping,
but gives up
his battering ways when he learns to give his wife a few
orgasms
(!) so she'll stop nagging. The former comes off like a
screed,
the latter naively unfunny.
The film's cast is the one bright spot, and as she frequently does,
Hui draws engaging performances from her leads. Each does what
they can with the material they're given to work with, and puts
considerable effort into making Yang Yeeshan's wispy characters
feel
like living, breathing Hong Kongers.
Things get a bit creaky when the time comes for Ng and Chow to get
hot
and heavy -- it's more a puff than an eruption of passion --
but their
dynamic works more often than not; Ng's typical urbane
charm helps. Too often, however, Yang falls back on archetypes --
the man-hating
lesbian for whom everything is a political
statement (whether or not
she has hair on her armpits remains a
mystery), the pretty lipstick
lesbian who's never seen without
heels -- that make it hard to care
about them until it's too late.
But that's OK, because that's when the
preaching starts again.
There's an interesting film in here about the
changing face of the
modern family, but a pat, agonizingly happy
ending really only
makes matters worse. It doesn't come close to the
jubilant finale
Hui and Yang may have been gunning for.
A Class Limited production
Sales Agent: Mega-Vision Pictures Limited
Credits:
Director: Ann Hui
Producer: Ann Hui
Writer: Yang Yeeshan
Executive producer: Angela Wong, Wong Jing;
Director of photography: Charlie Lam
Production designer: Albert Poon
Costume designer: Lancia Ng
Music: Anthony Chue
Editor: Eric Leung, Chan Chi-Wai.
Cast: Sandra Ng, Vivian Chow, Eddie Cheung, William Chan, Joey Man,
Jo Kuk
MPAA rating: Not rated.
Running time 106 minutes.
All About Love -- Film Review
By Elizabeth Kerr, October 08, 2010 08:08 ET
"All About Love."
Bottom Line: A could-be pleasant alternative to standard rom-com gets lost in a didactic shuffle.
BUSAN, South Korea --
Hong Kong filmmaker Ann Hui has made half a career out of taking the
city's social politics to task, and she does it again with "All About
Love," an almost romantic comedy about four lesbian friends, two
one-night stands that end in pregnancies and the men that find a way
to be fit into their lives.
With homosexuality being decriminalized in Hong Kong for just over two
decades and families increasingly being labeled alternative, the
material is timely. But unlike "Night and Day," which managed to tap
into the complexities of the marginalized (if somewhat
melodramatically), "Love" drowns in its own politics and winds up
sending mixed messages that are best left unsent.
Women's and LGBT-themed festivals are likely to take notice,
particularly with director Hui's name above the title, but the chances
of much beyond art house releases outside Asia, if that, looks
unlikely.
Forty-something former lovers Macy (comedy veteran Sandra Ng) and Anita
(Hong Kong's long-absent favorite glamour girl, Vivian Chow) reconnect
by chance when both find themselves pregnant after spur of the moment
one-night flings. Although both are confused as to what they're
feeling and how to proceed, they do manage to renew their shaky bond
with each other. While Anita considers terminating her pregnancy, Macy
offers her righteously indignant lesbian friends Eleanor (Joey Man)
and Wai (Jo Kuk) the option of adopting her child.
But when the
fathers (Eddie Cheung and William Chan) get wind of the plans, they
force themselves into all four women's lives and the hijinks ensue.
Or they should ensue.
"All About Love" has flashes of wit and some
earnestly charming moments, but those are buried under piles of
distracting polemics and some disturbingly misguided "comedy."
Dialogue that's supposed to sound like casual lounge conversation is
littered with words like "patriarchal" and "heterosexual hegemony."
Robert, the already-married father of bisexual Macy's baby, has a
penchant for domestic abuse that stems from her excessive shopping,
but gives up his battering ways when he learns to give his wife a few
orgasms (!) so she'll stop nagging. The former comes off like a
screed, the latter naively unfunny.
The film's cast is the one bright spot, and as she frequently does,
Hui draws engaging performances from her leads. Each does what they can with the material they're given to work with, and puts
considerable effort into making Yang Yeeshan's wispy characters feel
like living, breathing Hong Kongers.
Things get a bit creaky when the time comes for Ng and Chow to get hot
and heavy -- it's more a puff than an eruption of passion -- but their
dynamic works more often than not; Ng's typical urbane charm helps. Too often, however, Yang falls back on archetypes -- the man-hating
lesbian for whom everything is a political statement (whether or not
she has hair on her armpits remains a mystery), the pretty lipstick
lesbian who's never seen without heels -- that make it hard to care
about them until it's too late. But that's OK, because that's when the
preaching starts again.
There's an interesting film in here about the
changing face of the modern family, but a pat, agonizingly happy
ending really only makes matters worse. It doesn't come close to the
jubilant finale Hui and Yang may have been gunning for.
A Class Limited production
Sales Agent: Mega-Vision Pictures Limited
Credits:
Director: Ann Hui
Producer: Ann Hui
Writer: Yang Yeeshan
Executive producer: Angela Wong, Wong Jing;
Director of photography: Charlie Lam
Production designer: Albert Poon
Costume designer: Lancia Ng
Music: Anthony Chue
Editor: Eric Leung, Chan Chi-Wai.
Cast: Sandra Ng, Vivian Chow, Eddie Cheung, William Chan, Joey Man, Jo Kuk
MPAA rating: Not rated.
Running time 106 minutes.