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La Voyage due Balloon Rouge

Original language title: La Voyage due Balloon Rouge

Country: france

Year: 2008

Running time: 113

IMDB: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0826711/

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.

“One does not necessarily need to be familiar with Lamorisse’s whimsical boy-and-his-balloon travelogue–it’s merely a jumping off point for Hou. By way of a lost red balloon, we meet one of the three main characters, a young boy named Simon (Simon Iteanu), who is introduced standing outside a Metro station, looking upwards and begging the titular object (which slowly comes into our sight) to return. In contrast to Lamorisse’s film, the boy never gets his balloon back, but it remains a constant, often ghostly presence as Hou intermittently, leisurely tracks its whereabouts: bobbing in and out of the Metro, floating past windows and skylights, and eventually gliding over the Parisian skyline.

“The other two principal characters are Simon’s frazzled mother, Suzanne (a terrific, bleach blonde Juliette Binoche), who makes her living narrating puppet shows, and the comparatively more serene Song (Song Fang), a Taiwanese film student (and sly stand-in for the director) whom Suzanne hires as her son’s babysitter. Half the film is set in Suzanne’s tiny, cramped apartment; the other follows Song and Simon as they stroll through Paris, the former making her own student film homage to THE RED BALLOON with her video camera. Not much else happens, apart from a trip out of town to meet with a legendary Asian puppeteer and Suzanne’s squabbles with her tenants, and those incidents feel vestigial at best.

“As always, Hou is more concerned with emphasizing textures: the glow of a hidden side street, the way a gorgeous, melancholy reoccurring piano theme casts shadows over sidewalks and parks, and most spectacularly, the title-referencing motifs that subtly surface throughout, from a simple red handbag to the soft, pink glow emanating from an overhead lamp to even Simon’s head of curly red locks. This is Hou is at his most inviting, engaging and poetic and I hope he considers filming something similar in America–maybe he’ll have a better go at it than Wong Kar Wai recently has. 5 cats

 

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 quicker than some of his recent work, but there is still a languid quality that borders on mesmerizing. 4 cats.”

 

 

 

Flight of the Red Balloon

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