Metro Australia – July 2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
Beforemybed
thereis brightmoonlight
Sothatit seems
likefrostontheground:
Liftingmyhead
I watchthebrightmoon,
Loweringmyhead
I dream that I’mhome.
—LiBai^1

‘QuietNightThoughts’,oneofChina’smostfamouspoems,^2
byLi Bai,^3 one of the country’smost historicallysignificant
poets,mayhavebeenwrittenovertwelvecenturiesago,
butitsspartan,homesickimageryandtheliminal,dream-
likestateit evokeshavepeculiarkinshipwiththreevery
differentyet thematicallysimilar2018 arthousefilms from
acrosstheEastAsianregion.InLongDay’sJourneyinto
Night, byChinesedirectorBiGan,a shadyantiherogoes
on a surrealsearchthroughhis home town for a lost lover.
InCitiesofLastThings, byTaiwan-basedMalaysiandirector
HoWiDing,a policedetective’shard-boiledpsychologyis
reverse-engineeredfrompastrelationshipswithwomen.And
inWinter’sNight, bySouthKoreandirectorJangWoo-jin,a
long-marriedcoupleareforcedtoconfronttheirrelationship
whentheygetstrandedovernightatthetemplewherethey
had their first date. Thesethree films – whichpremieredat
the Cannes,Torontoand Jeonjufilm festivals,respectively


  • share a distinctive,expresslyhaunted,deconstructedap-
    proachtotime,thenightandmemory,even as they differ
    in the meansby whichthey achieveit.
    Anythreesuchwilfullyenigmaticworkswillconstitute
    somethingof a reflectingpool: we may see only what we
    wanttoin them,andmagnifycommonalitiesthatwould
    nototherwisepresentthemselves.Butwhiletakingtoheart
    anotherlessonfrom Li – who is perhapsbest knownin the
    Westasthepoetwho,legendhasit, drownedwhiletrying
    to kiss the reflectionof the moon in the water^4 (animage
    irresistiblyevokedin theupside-downpondsidekissingscene
    inLongDay’sJourney) – there is still a sensethat they flow
    alongthesamesingularcurrent.If theirwoozyatemporality
    is not exactlya new wave in Asian cinema(and indeedhas
    its forebearsin the films of Wong Kar Wai, Tsai Ming-liang,
    HouHsiao-hsien,ApichatpongWeerasethakulandeven
    Hong Sang-soo),this confluence, at this moment in time,
    is at least a significantripple.
    All three films are set at night. Bi’s and Jang’seven have
    the word in their titles – twice over in Bi’s, if you considerthat
    LongDay’sJourney’s originaltitletranslatesto‘LastNighton
    Earth’(cuinga brilliantbut backfiringNew Year’sEve market-
    ingcampaignin Chinathatsoldit asa last-night-of-the-year
    eventmovie^5 ). AndCitiesofLastThingstreblesdownonthe
    night-timethemebybeingsetoverthreenightsin itspro-
    tagonist’slife,eachprogressivelylaterbytheclock, though
    progressivelyearlierin the man’sexperience.
    Partly,the choiceis aesthetic:the noirishovertonesof
    the films by Bi and Ho suit the oily neonsof the midnight
    city,whileWinter’sNight– whichmay be set in the bucolic
    environsofa Buddhisttemple,butsharesthosemoreurban
    films’ electric-blueand hot-pinklightingmotif – achieves
    a lotofitsvisualdreaminessthroughtheuncannyinver-
    sion that is a dark sky vaulting over grounds bright with


Previousspreadandopposite:LongDay’sJourneyintoNight(threeimages)
Above, from top:Winter’s Night;Cities of Last Things (two images)


52 • Metro Magazine 201 | © ATOM

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