24 min

207 - Long Day's Journey into Night Eavesdropping at the Movies

    • Cine y TV

José's seen it once and returns to its depths for a second time, alongside Mike, who knows nothing about it. Chinese writer-director Bi Gan's Long Day's Journey into Night, unrelated to Eugene O'Neill's play, tells a story that flashes between memories of a love lost long ago and present day reality, culminating in an hour-long single take that moves through an entire mining village.

It's a film that oozes feelings of loss and nostalgia, the protagonist's return to his hometown seeing him wander through dereliction and abandonment, where his life was once vital and exciting. The noirish flashbacks are sumptuously composed and lit, romantic and evocative; one sinks into those gorgeous images.

The long take that comprises the film's second half is less successful, an exercise in form that leaves longueurs and attracts too much attention to itself. But its relationship to the first half is intriguing, its symbolism readily apparent if difficult to interpret, and its technical accomplishment unquestioned. (We didn't see this version of it, but it's entirely in 3D, which we can only imagine heightens its fluid, magical tone.)

Despite José's criticisms, it's one of his films of the year, though for Mike its qualities don't offer enough to counterbalance a second half with which he really struggled. But it's certainly worth your time, and if it's showing near you, you should catch it.

Recorded on 11th January 2020.

José's seen it once and returns to its depths for a second time, alongside Mike, who knows nothing about it. Chinese writer-director Bi Gan's Long Day's Journey into Night, unrelated to Eugene O'Neill's play, tells a story that flashes between memories of a love lost long ago and present day reality, culminating in an hour-long single take that moves through an entire mining village.

It's a film that oozes feelings of loss and nostalgia, the protagonist's return to his hometown seeing him wander through dereliction and abandonment, where his life was once vital and exciting. The noirish flashbacks are sumptuously composed and lit, romantic and evocative; one sinks into those gorgeous images.

The long take that comprises the film's second half is less successful, an exercise in form that leaves longueurs and attracts too much attention to itself. But its relationship to the first half is intriguing, its symbolism readily apparent if difficult to interpret, and its technical accomplishment unquestioned. (We didn't see this version of it, but it's entirely in 3D, which we can only imagine heightens its fluid, magical tone.)

Despite José's criticisms, it's one of his films of the year, though for Mike its qualities don't offer enough to counterbalance a second half with which he really struggled. But it's certainly worth your time, and if it's showing near you, you should catch it.

Recorded on 11th January 2020.

24 min

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