A young man of French, Chinese, and Cambodian descent dies, leaving behind his isolated mother and his 4-year male lover, who grieve but don't speak a lick of each other's language.A young man of French, Chinese, and Cambodian descent dies, leaving behind his isolated mother and his 4-year male lover, who grieve but don't speak a lick of each other's language.A young man of French, Chinese, and Cambodian descent dies, leaving behind his isolated mother and his 4-year male lover, who grieve but don't speak a lick of each other's language.
- Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
- 4 wins & 7 nominations total
- Junn
- (as Cheng Pei Pei)
- Vann
- (as Naomi Christie)
- Waiter
- (uncredited)
- Cafe customer
- (uncredited)
- Elderly Resident
- (uncredited)
- Café Customer
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFilmed in 3 weeks.
- GoofsAt the scene when Ben Whishaw and Andrew Leung were on bed, Ben says "You're really gonna do that?", but his lips don't move.
- Quotes
Junn: Through plenty of crying, I've learnt to be content that I won't always be happy, secure in my loneliness, hopeful that I will be able to cope. Every year on Christmas Day I get very lonely. An incredible feeling of solitude. On this day, everything has stood still, even the trees have stopped rustling, but I'm still moving, I want to move, but I have nothing to move to, and nowhere to go. The scars beneath my skin suddenly surface and I get scared. Scared of being alone.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Lilting: Deleted Scene (2014)
- SoundtracksYe Lai Xiang
Performed by Xiang Lan Li
In many Wong Kar Wai films the actors speak to each other in different languages with seeming full understanding. It suggests a disjuncture between time, place and culture, where language, usually the unifying factor within the narrative, becomes the source of each character's isolation. Lilting is self-conscious in its language play and it works powerfully to both comic and emotional effect. This has the magic effect of bending time. Locations are practically sparse, but the film gives the feeling of having moved us quite literally around the world.
The film demonstrates that with translation, there is always something essential that is lost. This might be cultural sensitivity, the feeling that we understand when, actually, we do not. Thus, it questions the assumptions we all make. It might also be the feeling that we know something or someone when actually we do not.
This may sound a heady, difficult mix. Far from it.
The film is beautifully shot, and again we experience something of the camera work of Christopher Doyle (Wong Kar Wai's leading cinematographer) in the delicate and soft palate of colours, and subtlety of framing which are as evocative as the language play in evoking mood and location. Nothing is wasted in this film. Even landmark pieces of music (another Wong motif) sit perfectly within the cross cultural narrative.
This is a film I will watch again and not simply for the references to Wong Kar Wai, It's a seamless depiction of loss in a world of seeming falling borders.
I hope you enjoy the film as much as I have.
- dominic_brant
- Aug 7, 2014
- Permalink
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Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $27,054
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $1,567
- Sep 28, 2014
- Gross worldwide
- $247,377
- Runtime1 hour 31 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1