In the new movie by Wayne Wang (Chan Is Missing, The Joy Luck Club, Smoke), you can't
scratch yourself without knocking elbows against the enigmatic metaphors crowding
in on all sides. Starting with the portentous title, the complex political issues
of Hong Kong's transfer from British to Chinese rule are variously symbolized by
hacked-open fish with hearts still beating, a jilted and disfigured young woman,
and a pathetic dog who amuses his master by running to exhaustion on a treadmill.
Unfortunately, even for a fan of Wang's earnestly humane cinema, Chinese Box is likely
to invoke yet another image: a slightly confused-looking Chinese-American man flinging
random buckets full of shit at a movie screen and hoping something sticks. But even
acknowledging this movie's high school lit journal pretensions and failure to deliver
the insights for which it strains so mightily, there's a touching fervor and authenticity
here that makes it compelling to watch, especially if you're already tuned into Wang's
sensibilities. Per the hallowed Hollywood tradition of A Dry White Season, Havana,
and The Year of Living Dangerously, Chinese Box assumes our basic cluelessness about
or disinterest in "furrin political doin's." To keep our attention from wandering,
the story is filtered through the eyes of a jaded Western observer who's both alienated
from and circumstantially bound to the culture at hand. An intense, ill-fated romance
is thrown in for added flavor enhancement. Jeremy Irons steps into the classic insider/outsider
role as "John," a terminally ill photojournalist trying to decipher Hong Kong's inscrutable
soul before he kicks the bucket. Adding to the pathos of it all are his emotionally
charged relationships with two women. One is an ex-flame named Vivian (Li) who's
trying to nullify her history as a prostitute by wheedling a rich old suit (Hui)
into marrying her. The other is Jean (Cheung), a mysterious, scarfaced young beauty
whom John seems to regard as the key to the Big Mysteries he's chasing. If all of
Wang's dreamily intoxicating images and portents of millennial revelation in this
quintessential modern city seem, in the end, to offer nothing more revealing than
an extra-lavish American Express commercial, it's no fault of the actors. The stunning
Cheung, in particular, comes close to conveying through sheer emotional force all
the elusive truth that Wang and co-screenwriters Jean-Claude Carriere (Buñuel's
longtime collaborator) and Larry Gross are straining for. The craggy, sad-eyed Irons
is almost as impressive, squeezing hard for the few drops of fresh juice that remain
in his derivative role. Overall, Chinese Box has to be considered a failure, simply
because it achieves so few of its own clearly implied goals. Yet it's a failure that
bodes well for Wang's future work. With its passion, unexpected outbursts of emotional
rawness, and shameless reach for spiritual grandeur, it's a sharp break from the
wan, aimless whimsicality that were becoming the director's trademarks. As artistic
personae go, existential turmoil is more appealing than middle-aged slackerdom any
time.
--Russell Smith
Full Length Reviews
Chinese Box 
Chinese Box 
Capsule Reviews
Chinese Box 
Other Films by Wayne Wang
Anywhere But Here 
Smoke 
Film Vault Suggested Links
Mrs. Brown 
Sense and Sensibility 
How to Make an American Quilt 
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