By Noel B. Vera
Video Review
Don鈥檛 Go Breaking
My Heart
(D膩n Sh膿n N谩n N眉)
Directed by Johnnie To
Available on Google Play
and YouTube
IF WE鈥橰E TALKING lighthearted romantic fare involving pretty prosperous Asians, I don鈥檛 see why we need to go all the way to Hollywood when Hong Kong has been doing perfectly fine for years.
Johnnie To鈥檚 Don鈥檛 Go Breaking My Heart (D膩n Sh膿n N谩n N眉, 2011) doesn鈥檛 make the mistake of pitting a girl against her man鈥檚 family鈥攁 decision that can only lead to pseudo-profundity and tears鈥攂ut opts instead for the classic love triangle: Chi-Yan (Mainland actress Gao Yuanyuan) has just come painfully off from a relationship of seven years; Sean (Louis Koo) is the CEO who first spots her while sitting in his gleaming Audi peering into a bus window. Later, the upset Chi-Yan (she鈥檇 been forced off the bus by her ex) unthinkingly crosses a street鈥攁 big no-no in heavily trafficked Hong Kong. She鈥檚 saved by Kevin (Daniel Wu), a bearded alcoholic who takes the trouble to stop oncoming cars while he picks up her dropped notes and papers.
Of course Chi-Yan has to choose: true heart or bad boy? To鈥檚 achievement is to make the choice a genuine head-scratcher, as one man or the other demonstrates his charm and ingenuity and determination to the hapless girl. Gao鈥檚 Chi-Yan has cute coming out her ears鈥攅specially after Kevin has convinced her to change her do, her pixie cut standing out against the elaborately long tresses of most Hong Kong women. To dares to pit Chi-Yan against a royal flush of bustier and more extravagantly sexy women (most of them Sean鈥檚 mistresses or prospective girlfriends), confident that her expressive spark will make her stand out; I think he鈥檚 right, and she does.
Wu鈥檚 Kevin is Chi-Yan鈥檚 soulmate: he鈥檚 down and low but willing to change鈥攎ore to the point, willing to change for her. If we鈥檙e talking types, Kevin is the sensitive artistic male nostalgic for fixed moments in time: a night of deliberately aimless carousing to start a new life, a casually gifted pet frog, a woman鈥檚 shadow caught in the spotlight as she looks back at him. Suddenly, Kevin is willing to quit drinking and go back in earnest to his day job (award-winning architecture鈥攚ho knew?); he鈥檚 the perfect man, so perfect in fact that you wonder if there鈥檚 such a thing as too perfect. Chi-Yan expresses similar doubts; her head tells her Kevin is the one but her heart tells her otherwise.
As the 鈥渙therwise,鈥 Louis Koo has in my book the most interesting role: he plays Sean like Richard III wooing Lady Anne, and鈥擲hakespeare knew all about this鈥攕ucceeds beyond all expectations, seducing Anne鈥攕orry, Chi-Yan鈥攚ith the reckless effrontery of his proposal. Sean sleeps around鈥攈e reneges on his first date in favor of a well-endowed woman and oysters at the Four Seasons鈥攁nd he鈥檚 unapologetic about it, mostly.
Unlike the terminally dull Nick Young (Henry Golding) in that more recent movie (whose only apparent fault is his Norman Bates-level mother fixation), Sean is a genuine asshole and knows it; twice women call him out, once by Chi-Yan. In a crucial scene, he admits this to her, even halfheartedly defends himself: 鈥淭here are two kinds of people in the world: those who sleep around and those who wish they did.鈥 He struggles with his vices and Chi-Yan can see him struggle and, despite his faults, can鈥檛 help but feel for him: he鈥檚 trying to be a better man, a work in progress if you like. 鈥淲ho knows?,鈥 you can almost hear Chi-Yan whisper to herself. 鈥淭he right woman might make a difference.鈥
Plus, Sean knows how to flirt. Sure, he spends serious money to win Chi-Yan over but it鈥檚 the way he spends鈥攚ith subversive wit and a deft sense of timing鈥攖hat keeps him a serious contender in her eyes: if they鈥檙e to have a relationship, she probably imagines, he鈥檒l at least keep her on her toes.
Speaking of toes, the director does the same to his audience by keeping all three lovers in relative equidistance, literally. Sean keeps spotting Chi-Yan through his windshield, riding buses; later, they engage in sexy flirting through office windows. Kevin is a latecomer but fast learner and鈥攂eing an architect鈥攗nderstands angles and perspectives between structures and the value of dramatic lighting (when he mugs for Chi-Yan, he sets the stage like a veteran prestidigitator).
Mention must be made of the way To uses his Hong Kong and Suzhou locations. That more recent movie may have more money (roughly $30 million) to throw at Singapore make the city look glamorous鈥攄rone shots, gigantic night-lit structures, expensive firework displays鈥攂ut To does more with less, turning (with the help of cinematographers Cheng Siu-Keung and To Hung-Mo) Hong Kong into a lover鈥檚 wonderland, all gleam and glitter and glass through which you might spot鈥攔eflected or displayed within鈥攜our true love.
Perhaps the oldest problems in the genre of romantic comedy (or to use the newer and, in my opinion, more debased term 鈥渞om-com鈥) is coming up with a fresh way to keep lovers temporarily apart, divided, walled off, making the moment of contact all the more memorable. The Fantasticks literally used a wall; Shakespeare resorted to the even simpler device of a balcony. To pulls back further: a few hundred feet between buildings and two thicknesses of glass, with Post-it notes used to funny, sexy effect.
Yes, the film is shallow as a puddle but this form of long-distance lovemaking, I submit, is To鈥檚 most evocative contribution to the genre: it says we鈥檙e increasingly being separated by class and distance in this increasingly urban jungle, despite being connected鈥攐r because we鈥檙e so connected鈥攂y telecommunication devices. Perhaps the best way to break through is with ideas, expressed with the simplest devices, like Post-it notes. Or a frog.
About that damned frog, as unabashed a fairy-tale metaphor as any I鈥檝e seen in recent movies鈥擨鈥檓 surprised there aren鈥檛 more in rom-coms; it鈥檚 so funny and effective and (surprisingly) poignant (the ugly amphibian that effortlessly turns into a princely pet). I鈥檓 surprised frogs don鈥檛 overpopulate rom-coms like a biblical plague. But then (as Kevin knew all along, and Chi-Yan and Sean ultimately realize with regards to her lovers) this frog is special, worth treasuring, one-of-a-kind; there can be no other. And there can be no other Don鈥檛 Go Breaking My Heart.
Don鈥檛 Go Breaking My Heart is available on Google Play and YouTube for $2.99.