| Flight
of the Red Balloon (France; 113 min.) directed by: Hou Hsiao-hsien starring: Juliette Binoche; Simon Iteanu; Fang Song |
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Chris says: "A few years back, Taiwanese director
Hou Hsiao-Hsien traveled to Japan to make CAFÉ
LUMIÈRE, a charming, languid tribute to one of that country's
greatest filmmakers, Yasujiro Ozu. In this, his first non-Asian effort,
he has crafted the earlier film's Western equivalent. Inspired by Albert
Lamorisse's classic 1956 short THE RED BALLOON, Hou instinctively approaches
Paris as a thoughtful tourist, though perhaps that term doesn't do him
justice--he's more a seeker, freshly viewing France's day-to-day rhythms
with the same sense of discovery as in his Japanese film. |
| Michael says: "SPOILERS (for THE RED BALLOON)!
I have seen Albert Lamorisse's classic 50's French film, LE BALLOON ROUGE (THE RED BALLOON) but it was many years ago, and my recollection of it is a bit spotty. That said, I was intrigued by THE FLIGHT OF THE RED BALLOON Hou Hsiao-Hsien's homage of sorts to that film. In the earlier film, a young boy befriends a red balloon that follows him all around Paris before it is ultimately destroyed by a gang of bullies. To the boy's surprise, a whole bunch of balloons then arrive to carry him away into the sky. Surely the balloon represents creativity and imagination in this fanciful and fantastic short film. "In THE FLIGHT OF THE RED BALLOON, Juliette Binoche stars as Suzanne, a harried single mother working on the development of a puppet theatre show. She hires a young filmmaker named Song (clearly a stand-in for the director) to act as a nanny of sorts for her young son Simon, who has attracted the attention of a similar red balloon. As Suzanne rushes around with the messiness and complications of adult life, Simon watches bemused, moving at his own pace in a life that's powerful in its simplicity. Meanwhile Song works on a short film based on THE RED BALLOON with Simon playing the role of the little boy. "Binoche is wonderful as the scattered, artistic mother railing
at her tenant, howling out lines at her puppet theatre, or dejectedly
smoking a cigarette. For Hou Hsiao-Hsien's first foray into the west (his
films are generally set in China, and more recently Japan) THE FLIGHT
OF THE RED BALLOON certainly seems to be partially a tribute to Paris,
with lovingly crafted shots of the city. The pace of Hou's recent film
is noticeably |