Film Review: Parking
Bottom Line: Black humor and smooth storytelling accompany a long night's journey into Taipei's parking hell
Oct 2, 2008
Pusan International Film Festival, A Window on Asian Cinema
CANNES -- Double parking evolves into a pert metaphor for Taipei's urban chaos and the obstacle-strewn nature of life in "Parking," a neat concept film by Chung Mong-Hong. Using a man's Kafkaesque attempts to get his car out as the narrative link, Chung devises a chain of bizarre encounters and confrontations that are by turns amusing and disquieting.
The film went down well with critics when it premiered this year in the Festival de Cannes' Un Certain Regard section. Making festival rounds will certainly generate more advantageous word-of-mouth, especially in Chinese-speaking markets, where leading man Chang Chen and supporting actress Kuei Lun-Mei rope in two distinct age groups.
"Parking" begins its detour from quotidian life when protagonist Chen Mo (Chang) buys a tiramisu and quibbles about its "lack of dynamism," to the cake-maker's chagrin. The film is peppered with this kind of cryptic, quasi-philosophical banter that sustains a theatrically absurd air as Chen makes karmic connections with a one-handed barber, a mourning family, a tailor with a father complex, a triad boss and a pimp, while searching for the driver who double-parked outside the shop.
Chung has plenty of style to spare but only a hint of substance. The highlight of the film is a toilet scene involving a wide-eyed fish head. A delicious visual joke, no doubt. But like the white paint artfully splashed on a tailor's torso, or the ending's flashy experimental shot of a centipede, they are devised more for aesthetic effect than essential to the plot. Art direction is lush, with duskily lit 1970s retro decors and cinematography of a mellow, velvety texture. The lyrical music features some violin pizzicato that sounds like the score of "In the Mood for Love."
Cast: Chang Chen, Jack Kao, Kwai Lun-Mei, Leon Dai, Chapman To, Peggy Tseng.
Screenwriter-director-director of photography: Chung Mong-Hong.
Producers: Shao-Chien Tseng, Jane H. Hsiao.
Art director: Shih-Hao Chao.
Music: An Dong.
Production designer: Chao Shi-Hao.
Editor: Shih-Jing Lo.
Sales: Good Films Workshop.
No rating, 113 minutes.
production: Cream Production
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