Beijing Flickers (2012) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
2 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
I disagree somewhat with the last review.
allisonrios129 March 2013
Warning: Spoilers
I just watched this at a film festival at my school. I feel as if the last reviewer didn't pay enough attention to the characters relationships. Firstly, San Bao is not kicked out of his "apartment" (really a shed) from his own doing; his landlady informed him they were bulldozing it, and that he must get out. (Honestly, he even goes on about how nice his landlady is) Secondly, his friend who is a doorman/valet is not seen having sex with any prostitutes, the only woman who appears in a car he's parking is his girlfriend who is cheating on him with rich man. Also, the character he encounters in the hospital is not a "sunny hairdresser", Anyone who watches this movie after reading this will see that. Also, the character Su Mo's relationship with her boss is more complex than being sexually molested by HIS boss. This movie is a starkly gloomy picture of what young people in Beijing struggle to overcome in a country that does not exactly have the best track record in regards to taking care of it's young people. I would watch this movie with the mindset that the people in this movie are not from the US, their characters have grown up in a society much different than ours. I think that there is more to the cloud of darkness that San Bao describes than melodrama. One of the things that I agree with the other reviewer on is that there are a number of especially beautiful, tense, and wonderful scenes in this movie.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
I wish I didn't eat that glass.
mbs15 January 2013
I didn't really care for the movie so much, indeed i kind of feel like it was almost trying too hard to achieve the kind of moody tone poetry it really wanted to carve out, but i do feel like this is a movie that other people could and prob will really really love. If you're a fan of the films of Wong Kar-Wai--i would really recommend checking this one out as this covers a lot of similar terrain both dialog wise, atmosphere wise, and character wise, it definitely felt like the work of someone who really looked up to Wong Kar-Wai. I enjoyed that director's work more than enough that i can certainly appreciate the similarities that are present here without really getting wrapped up in this film's sense of poetic ramblings and discourses--again both dialog and visual wise, and i should say there are a handful of sequences here that really hit the mark--such as the one scene where the lead decided that maybe he will get run over by a train after all. In those handful of moments the film really comes to life in a vivid and memorable way--unfortunately they're only moments.

The plot is essentially there's this young gloomy man (maybe in his early twenties)who upon breaking up with his much rhapsodized love interest seeks to end his life--be it physically or just emotionally, he essentially stops taking care of himself getting himself kicked out of his residence, and just stops caring about anything and everything--he gets so drunk in the first five minutes of the film that he bites into a glass and needs to receive stitches on his mouth because of this but he doesn't seem to even care all that much so given up on any joy he could possibly get out of life is he. In the hospital he's befriended by a very sunny hairdresser who along with another friend of his (a doorman prone to having sex with prostitutes) become a trio of young guys just hanging around and getting drunk while the lead waxes poetic in voice-over some of which is very effective (the scene of the three of them passing out and lying down drunk outside has the guy saying to the audience that he wishes he could buy them all the drinks they want but since he can't afford it, at least he can afford the cold wind that they can all feel which will remind them all that they're alive??? i am not sure but it both looked and sounded cool) eventually the three guys hook up with this singer of a rock band that plays at the bar where the lead ate that glass--and she and another girl (who ends up being the sister of one of the other two guys) ends up hanging out and after two or three scenes of the lead trying to off himself eventually forms a connection to the singer of the band. This in turn leads to not a whole lot--there was an attempt at blackmailing the other girl's boss at the bank she works at because she had been sexually molested by him, and there are a couple of alternatively amusing and puzzling scenes involving the other characters doing other things....i hope by now you get the idea that this film isn't really about plot anyways as much as it is the brooding atmosphere and rather dystopic mindset of its main character and how it basically informs everything he sees around him--from his friends, to a potential new love, to everything he passes by, everything is just touched by a cloud of sadness and doom. I feel like this film might have been trying to say something about depression and how both beautiful and ugly, natural and unnatural the young man's mind will process sadness--but that may be ascribing a quality to the film that only i was seeing while watching it. All of that said, the film's pacing is lethargic at best, torpid at worst, but again there are these occasionally wonderful scenes scattered throughout that suggest a real touch of poetry and a real future for the director if he could maybe put together a slightly less languorous film next time out--or at least one that has as many moments that work as moments that don't.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed