| Index | 6 reviews in total |
5 out of 7 people found the following review useful:
Fun, 10 February 2003
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Author:
Lester Mak (leekandham) from London, UK
It's rather nice occasionally to see a romantic movie that's not based on
teenage puppy-love, and Sausalito falls right into this
category.
Maggie Cheung plays Ellen, a single mother in her mid-30s and makes a
living
as a taxi driver in San Francisco. Meanwhile, Mike (Leon Lai) is the CEO
of
his successful internet start-up company. However, it's developing its own
cash problems, and business problems are hitting his own personal life. On
one night to get away from it all, Leon borrows someone he doesn't know,
Maggie, for a trick to woo the chicks, but instead attracts the attention
of
Maggie. And so a bumpy taxi-ride lies ahead.
Sausalito is a feel-good movie about life in a world that you begin to
realise are full of strangers. The story is well written, with some very
good scenes that involve her son, Scott.
Although I wouldn't call this an outstanding film, there is a lot of good
subtext in the film, and the story flows very well. The story also
acknowledges San Francisco culture by including addressing many of the
bigotries that people outside of San Francisco may not be readily
accepting
as yet, one of which is the inclusion a homosexual, multi-racial couple of
contrasting ages.
This is definitely one to add to the 'To Watch' list.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
characters, 15 January 2001
Author:
(leeyinyin_2000@yahoo.com) from Indonesia
Both main characters are portrayed well in this movie. We can see the
mature, independent divorced woman in a Maggie cheung or Ellen and a selfish
childish easy going guy in a Leon Lai or Mike. Both are portrayed perfectly.
We might dislike a character like Mike in the story, but that is fact!
The only unbalanced thing is the setting for Ellen's house which considered
too lux for a cab driver. Maybe there should be a line to cope with such
situation, like the ex-husband is supporting them, and she work as a cab
driver just as part timer, etc etc.
In a rough way, this film is excellent! All the dialogues, the house
interiors, costumes, and fact of life is described very well.
2 out of 4 people found the following review useful:
A romantic comedy, with very little of either., 23 July 2008
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Author:
MikeA from Isle of Man, British Isles
Maggie Cheung and Leon Lai are among my favourite Asian actors, but any
hopes I had that they would set the screen on fire again after their
partnership in 'Comrades: Almost a Love Story' were soon dashed as it
became clear this unassuming romantic comedy contains very little
comedy, and not much romance either.
It starts off well enough. Ellen (Cheung) is a cab driver in San
Francisco, raising a young son. Invited to a nightclub, she ends up
having an uncomfortable one-night stand with Mike (Lai), who appears to
be some kind of dot-com playboy millionaire. I say 'appears to be' as
for some reason Lai underplays the role to such a degree that he seems
bored most of the time - and this rubbed off on me.
Naturally the two hit it off and begin to learn more about each other,
until Mike's business deals start to go sour, which disrupts his
relationship with Ellen. Can true love overcome such a hurdle, etc.?
The opening half hour focuses on Ellen, and Cheung is more than capable
of drawing us her lonely, struggling character. It's regrettable then
that the focus shifts to Lai's rather unlikable character for the
remainder of the film, and even more regrettable than the film starts
to pile more and more unlikely scenarios on us right up to its
(anti)climax.
I was actually sad I didn't like this flick. The setting is certainly
different, it's well shot by Andrew Lau (although the musical score is
horrible), and I usually enjoy Cheung and Lai. There was simply more
NOT to like, though, including an uncomfortable and almost homophobic
role for the wonderful Richard Ng (Wong Jing's influence, I suspect),
and the wasting of Valerie Chow as a corporate femme fatale.
If you're a huge fan of the stars, you may see past the story and enjoy
this one. It didn't work for me, though.
The Deltamac version looks decent enough, and the subtitles are OK,
although definitely not perfect.
1 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Maggie's Performance The Film's Saving Grace, 21 June 2000
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Author:
Bishonen from Los Angeles, CA
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
*warning: potential spoilers'
A number of intriguing disparate elements:
-the San Francisco location, beautifully shot and actually moving beyond
the
tired Golden Gate Bridge/Rice-a-Roni tourists' view of the city and
utilizing some unique neighborhoods like the Castro and the
Mission.
-Director Andrew Lau, better known for action movies like `The Storm
Riders'
branching into romantic comedy.
-Maggie Cheung and Leon Lai, promising that lightning might strike twice
after `Comrades'.
Sadly, the result is far, far less than the sum of its (potential) parts.
The film's concessions to its setting and pre-Millennial era consist of
utilizing San Francisco's image as a dot-com haven and the unsettled lives
of its protagonists in this society results in something laughably
half-baked; the `Nirvana' site proposed by Leon Lai's dot-comer is
ludicrous
but a more problematic issue is Mike's character as presented in the
script
and acting. Mike's (Lai) character is woefully underdeveloped and seems a
blank slate, a Rorschach man-boy with vague economic prospects and
plastic,
generic aspirations. It's worse than presenting him as an `everyman'; he
has no personality as written and Lai, as usual, brings little to the
table
as far as making Mike a flesh-and-blood cinematic creation. He barely
reacts to his surroundings or changes facial expression throughout the
hour-and-forty minute running time and the film's brutally myopic focus on
his male protagonist only goes to show the filmmakers projecting their own
male narcissism of the dullest kind.
Would that the film stayed, or at least conceded, some more focus to
Maggie
Cheung. For the first thirty minutes, her side of the drama actually
shows
some promise; a restless, struggling (we can overlook the ridiculously
plush
2-story house she rents on a single-mother cab-driver's salary.in San
Francisco's current economic ruthlessness, a millionaire would be
hard-pressed to afford such abodes in even newly gentrified neighborhoods
in
SF) and questioning woman flirting with promiscuity, wanting more (of
what?
She doesn't seem to know and we're intrigued to find out) than the
boundaries of her life. It's all due to Maggie. She makes the drama
worth
watching; she IS the drama, as the thin script and herky-jerky
plot/character development would leave lesser actors in the lurch and
audiences asleep by the end of the first act. Fear, defiance,
ambivalence,
joy, panic, pain, tranquility, emotional overdrive dance across her face
effortlessly---it's no accident she evoked the spirit of silent actors so
evanescently in `Irma Vep'. Without words or belabored emoting, Cheung
lets
the audience into the emotional life of a cinematic being like a funhouse
of
hidden, wonderfully discovered dimensions. The script woefully,
colossally
lets her down by the middle as she winds up playing martyr and displaced
maternal figure to Lai's tiresome Peter Pan stunted -development dweeb
(yes,
he's cute and will probably make lots of dough, but would someone like her
give this loser more than two minutes after the conversation starts?).
More minuses: the film's homophobic slant, strange for a film set in San
Francisco. Richard Ng's self-deprecating gay landlord character is an
insult, even as a `mother' substitute for Mike who had essentially raised
him from childhood, it's necessary for him to emphasize in a dialogue
scene
with Maggie his inadequacy in teaching Mike how to be a `real' man. It's
one thing to make gay characters the butt of jokes (what else would you
expect from producer Wong Jing's Neanderthalic sensibility) but it's far
more horrid, embarrassing and insulting when a film purports to give you
sympathetic gay characters and then railroads them into self-flagellation
over their `deviancy' no matter how benignly presented. It's not the
film's
worse problem---I won't even go into the ludicrous climax, an
unbelievable,
corny and trite act of self-redemption by our dot-com hero---but it's
symptomatic of the film's regressive attitude towards gender roles and a
cheap, senselessly one-dimensional attitude towards characters who don't
fall within the hetero man/boy paradigm.
Maggie, wonderful as she is, doesn't quite escape. Still worth seeing for
her---keep your eyes on Maggie and your expectations very, very, very
low.
0 out of 3 people found the following review useful:
Breaking cliché's, 26 April 2003
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Author:
eric wobma from amsterdam
Every love story is the same, as is every whodunit, thriller, or war
movie... This is a brilliant love story, and the principal cast has
done a nice job.
Better yet is the work behind the camera; 'Hong Kong Cinema' has never
shown any fear to go 'beyond' the technical possibilities, and although
there seems to be some restrain in regards of camera-movements,
lighting & editing, it is still refreshing and exiting. Every one in
Hollywood ought to get a training job in Hong Kong !!
There are many things to talk about, but let's pick one: MAGGIE CHEUNG.
Everybody worldwide knows her by now, since no one has an excuse for
not knowing her after her performance in IN THE MOOD FOR LOVE. She is
sensational. Truly gifted. And THE Lady MacBeth of this new century !
Why hasn't anybody seen that yet ! She's so glorious, so multi-faceted,
so marvelous.
As is the talk in the world of opera: why another Lady MacBeth, Carmen,
Tosca, where there are already so many on vinyl or celluloid... Every
generation has its right for their own heroes in archetypical roles.
Maggie Cheung ought to be our 'own' Lady MacBeth. (And I know just the
perfect place to set the Shakespearean play, and who to cast beside
her..). Until that moment, relish her performances that do exist. As in
this lush romance.
2 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Absolutely Worthless !, 5 October 2000
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Author:
CHI-14 (chil_man@email.com) from Hong Kong
Please don't expect to see another "Comrade, Almost A Love Story", although this movie also stars Maggie Cheung and Leon Lai. It's the worst movie of Maggie Cheung in recent years. There is almost no description to the characters. Also nothing entertaining I can find. Awful is the best description to the performance of the actors, other than Maggie Cheung, and the style of the movie is very pretentious. Absolutely blamable is also the music. It's a movie undoubtedly worthless. Please don't see it unless you want to know why Hong Kong Cinema has gone downhill in the past several years.
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