Flight of the Red Balloon Movie Review
Flight of the Red Balloon Review
"Flight of the Red Balloon" Overview

Rating: NR
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : Hou Hsiao-hsienProducer : Francois Margolin,Kristina Larsen
Screenwiter : Hou Hsiao-hsien
Starring : Juliette Binoche,Song Fang,Simon Iteanu,Hippolyte Girardot
Paris (and France in general) tends to be a habitat seen in big sweeps and large
outside shots, attesting to the ongoing American romanticizing of the City of Light.
The Eiffel Tower looming large in the background, the stoic Arc de Triomphe, the
rolling lawns in front of the Basilique du Sacre Coeur: However intimate the city's
candor might be, film has always taken Paris in with its monuments, landmarks, and
open spaces as pieces of a collective familiarity.
With the exception of a lone, beautiful coda within the Musee d'Orsay, the very body
responsible for the film's funding, Hou Hsiao-hsien's gorgeous Flight of the Red
Balloon drifts away from these environs, making a film about Paris life that seems uninterested
in Paris as a city. Based on, or perhaps just familiarized with, Albert Lamorisse's
French children's classic The Red Balloon, Hsiao-hsien moves the focus from a child and
his balloon to a child, his frazzled mom, and his new Chinese nanny, a young filmmaker
on a student visa.
In an odd act of attentiveness, the nanny, Song (a great Song Fang), begins to make
a student film about the red balloon floating around her arondissement, co-starring
her ward, Simon (Simon Iteanu). Explaining how she got the balloon to move exactly
how she wanted, Song briefly talks about green screens and the pratfalls of modern,
low-budget filmmaking, giving Hsiao-hsien a behind-the-scenes fantasia of sorts within
his own film. Simon's father, a writer in self-imposed exile in Montreal, has only
one interaction by phone, but his presence is aptly felt through Simon's mother's
(Juliette Binoche) barbed interactions with her husband's friend and current tenant,
Marc (Hippolyte Girardot).
Binoche is a dream. Like the city in which the film is based, Hsiao-hsien has stripped
Binoche of her token abilities: her dark hair mussed and badly dyed into a blonde
mess, her usual role as center of gravity thrown into a state of utter upheaval,
her coy beauty mutated into a palette of raw nerves. Yet, through this act of deviation,
Binoche gives one of her best performances to date, at once completely spontaneous
and thoughtfully patient.
In a year brimming with great French films (Heartbeat Detector, The Duchess of Langeais), it's ironic
that the most successful of them would come from the Chinese-born, Taiwan-educated
Hsiao-hsien. Like Wong Kar-wai's first immersion into foreign language cinema, the
English-tongued My Blueberry Nights, Hsiao-hsien continues to study the same tropes of
his outstanding Chinese output: loneliness, isolation, stilted love. It also touches
on the polarizing effect of city life and travel, a strong force in the master's
2005 tribute to Ozu, Café Lumiere. But whereas Kar-wai's exercise coaxes out the director's
inevitable faults, Balloon highlights Hsiao-hsien' staggering strengths, both aesthetically
and technically speaking: Like the rest of Hsiao-hsien's oeuvre, his latest feels
like the culmination of all his works beforehand.
Working with the masterful cinematographer Mark Lee Ping Bing, Hsiao-hsien, who gave
his actors full character histories but no written dialogue, delivers all the film's
action in confined settings. A cramped, cluttered apartment, a darkened puppet theater
, the narrow streets of Paris: Somehow these areas breed imagination for Hsiao-hsien's
actors. Shot in his patently-resplendent long takes, the aesthetic is seemingly unencumbered,
but, coupled with Chu Shih Yi's gentle sound design, the images breathlessly unspool into
suites of effortless intricacy. As Suzanne argues heatedly with Marc downstairs,
Hsiao-hsien's camera wanders around the apartment as Song and Simon prepare for a
mid-day snack and a blind tuner repairs Suzanne's piano. All the sounds and movement
s of the characters co-mingle, interact, climax, and then gently descend: You won't
see anything as rapturous as this in any film this year.
Aka Le Voyage du ballon rouge.
OK, so the Eiffel Tower appears once.
Reviewer: Chris Cabin





