2046 (film)

From Citizendium
Revision as of 13:52, 6 February 2008 by imported>Louise Valmoria (Feb 2008 write-a-thon - the film 2046)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

2046 is a film by Hong Kong director Wong Kar Wai that explores his response to the return of the administration of Hong Kong to China by Britain. It forms the final part of a loose trilogy, featuring several characters that previously appeared in Wong Kar Wai movies Days of Being Wild and In The Mood For Love. The film is largely set in 1960's Hong Kong and in the futuristic fictional world created by the main character, writer Chow Mo Wan and does not mention the handover directly, instead exploring the issues of a changing world, memory and nostalgia through the romantic relationships of Chow.

Background

The film 2046 thematically draws together many themes and characters that had previously appeared in Wong Kar Wai's oeuvre. It also focuses on the administrative handover of Hong Kong to China from Britain in 1997. Part of the terms of the handover involved keeping the legal and administrative systems of the Hong Kong for fifty years. The year 2046 is the last year this will apply. This film explores the director's response to the question: could anyone ever promise that nothing will change?

The number 2046 also appeared in the related film In The Mood For Love as the hotel room number of Chow Mo Wan (the central character of this film).

Over the closing credits of film, multilingual news clips discussing the handover of Hong Kong back to China and the promise that "nothing would change for fifty years" can be heard over the film's main five-note theme.


Musical References

There are strong musical references that identify the characters and their place in the plot.

The film's opening credits run over the theme song "Decision" by Zbigniew Preisner, which featured in the Polish film A Short Film About Killing.

Siboney by Connie Francis represents Bai Ling.

Casta Diva from the opera Norma, sung by Angela Georghieu, features as a song highlighting the relationship between

Adagio by Secret Garden represents the romance between Jing Wen and her boyfriend, as well as the androids that they play in the fictional 2046 train.

Have Yourself A Merry Christmas also plays in the film during Christmas time, which also played during previous films in the trilogy Days of Being Wild and In The Mood For Love.