| Index | 6 reviews in total |
7 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Soulful bespectacled Takeshi's heart-breaking performance, 18 June 1999
Author:
(donleavy@hotmail.com)
This movie stars 3 Chinese pop stars, so on the surface, it's like a
Chinese
equivalent of such American teeny-bopper fare as Dawson's Creek. But of
course, it's much better.
The story has a more thoughtful and philosophical bent to it, and doesn't
have silly and manipulative romantic entanglements like its American
counterparts. That is, no one whines about their broken heart very much -
but you still feel the pain.
Takeshi Kaneshiro is the best of the 3 leads as a lovelorn but reserved
loner, and he conveys a lot of emotion while being very subtle. The other
2
actors, Kelly Chan and Aaron Kwok, are fine, too.
The all-important novel that Takeshi's character writes fulfills its
promise
of being an artlessly simple but incredibly sweet love
story.
I'm increasingly impressed by foreign movies and their ability to convey
the
complexity of love, while by contrast, most American movies seem to make
it
much simpler and less realistic. This movie is one such foreign
movie.
Leslie Cheung & Anita Yuen have small but effective roles as 2 people
touched by the novel that Chan Kar-fu (Takeshi) writes.
4 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
Something About Love, 11 October 2008
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Author:
crossbow0106 from United States
This is the story of a piano tuner (Takeshi Kaneshiro-Chan Kar-fu) who meets Yan Muk-yan (Aaron Kwok) at a job. By sheer "luck", they meet again and Yan moves in with Chan. A beautiful young lady (Kelly Chen-Mok Man-yee) moves into the same building and both Chan and Yan fall in love with her. If this film was a comedy only about this, their misadventures trying to win Mok's heart, it would be fine because they are all appealing characters. However, this film goes far beyond that. The film is a meditation on love, being together and just a little lust. There are moments of great comic relief, as well as some tender scenes. The title of the film refers to Bach, Anna Magdalena being his wife. That means that the music in the film is wonderful, as the film pretty much is. The film has a tremendous heart, a pleasant departure from romantic comedies that struggle to make ninety minutes and add irrelevant scenes and characters. Everyone in the film is great, its a high water mark for romantic comedy. I highly recommend this film if you like romantic comedy, its definitely worthy of your time.
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
A nice surprise, 14 June 2004
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Author:
david burrowes from california, USA
I went into this film with no expectations, and came away very
pleasantly surprised. It is one of my most favorite romantic films.
The main storyline, a romantic triangle, was nice enough. Each of the
three main characters (Chan Kar-fu, Mok Man-yee, Yau Muk-yan) have such
different approaches to life and romance that it was pleasant (and sad)
to watch the ways they connect and fail to connect. I felt this
storyline was satisfying by itself, but I think it was given some
richness by a series of very peripheral characters that comment on the
theme of the film with their own inabilities to romantically connect
with the people they are attracted to. For me, however, the thing that
made this film stand out most strongly was the eccentric
story-within-a-story (written by Chan Kar-fu, read by the assistant
editor) which both lightened the serious tone of the film, and deepened
the theme of love and the difficulty of admitting that love.
3 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
An unusual way to convey a story from ordinary material, 22 December 2003
Author:
Yuen Ho Wong from Boston, USA
Anna Magdalena is certainly a very interesting film. It is interesting in that this film's plot does progress linearly, bilaterally or whatever. In fact, it is hard to categorise this style of storytelling. Besides being a comedy and a drama, I think this film can also be categorised as a fantasy. To some people, a plot is considered to be an essential ingredient in a film. A certain setting must lead to a certain event, and then that event must be developed further into a plot. However, this movie has proven to the audience that a motion picture need not be bounded by the rules of literature or the theater. In portraying a romantic story, most artistic screenwriters will use a narration, but a creative screenwriter like Ivy Ho chose a much more fantastic style. In the middle of the film, the Anna Magdalena that is chapterised in a style that resembles a classical music piece, spins off to the inner fantasy of Chan Ka Fu(Takeshi), who has written it down and sent it to a publisher. As Chan's flight of imagination is being played out, the subtle love of the assistant editor(Yuen) and the editor(Cheng) are also being portrayed. Granted, The love triangles of Chan, Mok(Kelly Chan), and You(Aaron Kwok), and the As. editor, the editor and his wife are seemingly irrelevant, but the screenwriter has already made it clear that this film is not about the telling of a single story, but a more general, more common yawn for true love among Hongkongers. For those who are tired of set ways, who want a little spice in the dough, who are open-minded to different things, this movie is a must-see.
4 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
A touching story, 3 April 2003
Author:
Margaret from Australia
I dont know why everyone just has bad reviews about this film. I
personally
really enjoyed this movie and have watched it countless
times.
The film was very well plotted. Both Actors/Actresses and behind the scene
producers need to be praised for what a meaningful story they put
together.
The ending of the film was one of the most touching scenes I had ever
scene
when the second musical box opened.
People should try to appreciate the film. Try to understand the meaning
behind it and then maybe will enjoy the film as much as i
do!
3 out of 11 people found the following review useful:
One for a long snooze, 10 February 2003
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Author:
Lester Mak (leekandham) from London, UK
This film is unbelievable. I mean, it's unbelievable that this film even
left the drawing board. It's unbelievable that three talented actors could
even choose to do a film of this quality. Correction. It's not the
quality,
it's the lack thereof I should be noting.
Anna Magdalena is a 'romantic tale' (it says on the back), in which a
piano
tuner (Takeshi Kaneshiro) bumps into a serial womaniser (Aaron Kwok) who
is
a no-hoper in his aspirations to become a novelist. The 'piano tuner'
decides to offer the 'novelist' a hand by putting him up for a few days.
Meanwhile a new resident (Kelly Chen) moves into their apartment block,
with
piano and all, only that she shows little talent. A 'love triangle'
forms.
Well, maybe even the clichéd love triangle cannot be an attribute here, as
I've seen more chemistry in a bottle of air. The three characters seem as
loveless as a defaced stone wall, and the film rarely ever delves further
than skin deep. The storyline is virtually nonexistent, and where there is
one, there is too much irrelevance to keep the flow running. In
particular,
the film tries the old tactic of showing the unique quirks of the
characters, but in no way do they fit in with the story, nor add anything
to
what we want to discover.
There is nothing in this film that salvages it from me wanting to call it
rubbish. It is simply pitiful. I am a big fan of Kaneshiro and Chen, and I
did like to a certain extent their outing in Lavender, but Anna Magdalena
would be a film I wouldn't want to remember them for. One to leave on the
shop shelf.
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