All memories are
traces of tears.
If you were to dance to the end of love, what would it look
like?
Wong Kar-Wai’s 2046
is the sequel to his celebrated 2000 masterpiece In the Mood for Love. In that classic, two neighbours in 1960s Hong
Kong discover that their spouses are cuckolding them with each other. The man
(Chow Mo-wan, played by Tony Leung) and woman (Su Li-Zhen, played by Maggie
Cheung) confide in one another and form an unusual bond. Against their better
judgment, they fall in love, their sorrow tethering their wasted souls to one
another. In the end they part, never to reunite.
2046 picks up on
the action a few yeaas later, in the late 1960s. The film takes on multiple
stories within the space of just two hours, but they are all intertwined with
one another on an emotional, if not necessarily logical narrative, level. Chow
has become a successful science fiction writer, fulfilling the potential
Li-Zhen saw in him during their time in the summer of 1962. Chow’s also become a bon
vivant and career lothario, living in room #2047. In a coincidence, he and
Li-zhen went to discuss their marital troubles (although they never consummated
their love) in room #2046 in a different hotel. It's enough for him to take up residence there. The emotional damage has scarred him,
as he acts out of character contrary to how he was in the previous film by
bedding a series of women (played by an outstanding cast of Chinese stars such
as Carina Lau, Gong Li, Faye Wong and Zhang Ziyi in her career performance) who
occupy room #2046. The key is that each of these women reminds him of aspects
of Li-zhen’s personality, but their totality never recreates or conjures the
memory of the woman he loves. Nat King Cole invades the soundtrack, singing of
happy memories but lacing them with a slight melancholy, for Chow cannot find
joy despite going through the motions of lovemaking.
At another narrative level is the dramatization of Tak
(Tayuka Kimura), a lonely Japanese man who travels in the figment of Chow’s
imagination to a destination called 2046. It’s never made clear if it’s the
year before Hong Kong returns to China, or if it’s a fictional destination, or
perhaps a secular Asian version of a Judeo-Christian purgatory. They say in
2046 that those who venture there find their happiest memories, never to
return. Only Tak attempts to, but why? Tak falls in love with a female android,
but which does not leave with him. Why?
It’s clear that Tak’s narrative is an extension of Chow’s misery
and mourning for Li-zhen (who only appears in one flashback in 2046). Chow inhabits the film, occupying
psychic and physical space, never registering emotionally to those around him.
In the aftermath of the loss of his great love, he engaged in love only on a
superficial level, disengaging himself from the proceedings and
disregarding the emotional needs of his lovers while never dropping the veneer
of his charm (is he a sociopath in disguise?). Zhang’s character is a
high-class escort whose persona may be closest to his, as she understands his
love in transactional terms. They share the same detachment, but
because neither will let the other see what’s behind the mask, the connection
remains shallow and functional.
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(As a side note, it’s no accident that the years 2046 and
2047 also correspond with the events of Hong Kong, and pure coincidence that pro-democracy
protests are taking place in Hong Kong as I write this, with the handover
taking place exactly 33 years into the future. There’s an entire treatise
waiting to be written on the themes of China-Hong Kong politics with this film,
but that is best left as the subject of another essay.)
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