Film premiere: The Hand

Date

Schedule

21:30–22:30

Place

Garage Screen summer cinema

DESCRIPTION

Representing Wong Kar-wai's finest cinematography, The Hand is the protagonist's painful flashback of many years of unrequited love. Initially included in the almanac on love and sex entitled Eros (2004), Kar-wai later made a new, extended, and re-edited version of the picture telling the story of a submissive tailor and his arrogant client, a call girl losing her beauty. Garage Screen summer cinema presents the Russian premiere of the restored director's cut.

As the dying Miss Hua asks her tailor Xiao Zhang “Remember how we met?” he recalls how once he came to Hua as an apprentice to hand over an order and learned that she worked as a call girl; how Hua seduced him and promised that he would always remember her hand; and how he fell madly in love with Hua, while she, despising his poverty, made him jealous.

The shooting of The Hand ran in parallel with the work on 2046 and was marked with multiple problems. Due to the SARS outbreak in South China, the production was moved from Shanghai to Hong Kong. The crew had to wash hands, wear masks, and avoid physical contact constantly. This explains the film’s main limitation, with Zhang never touching Miss Hua, except for taking measurements. Like other Kar-wai movies where desire rarely manages to find its addressee, the love of The Hand’s protagonist is reflected through the dresses he makes for his client and loved one. Despite minimal locations (the action mostly moves between Hua’s flat and the studio where Zhan works), the director manages to create a multilayered story, intertwining the impossibility of love with the class gap. Hairstyles, dresses, and costumes sweep in front of the viewer, becoming indicators of the main characters’ wealth (and diminishing).

With Wong Kar-wai’s filmography being one endless almanac of stories that intersect at the level of plots and themes, The Hand focuses on just one such motif, revealing the filmmaker’s signature manner in a condensed form. Known for his interest in vulnerable and sensitive men, Kar-wai continues to deconstruct masculinity, shooting a picture about a young tailor’s sexual initiation, which reverses the usual gender roles. Filmed by Christopher Doyle, the cinematographer of seven of Kar-wai’s feature-length movies, its artistic solution, including Miss Hua’s elaborate dresses, was created by another permanent co-author, William Chan. The tailor and his client are portrayed by Chang Chen (Happy Together) and Gong Li (2046). The renowned composer Peer Raben, collaborator of many German new wave filmmakers, including Rainer Werner Fassbinder, wrote the music score.

The film will be screened in Mandarin with Russian subtitles.

The Hand
Dir. Wong Kar-wai
Hong Kong, 2004. 56 min. 18+

tickets

Standard: 450 rubles
Student: 350 rubles*

BUY TICKETS

  GARAGE cardholders:  225 RUB.

Tickets for seniors, veterans, large families, under 18s, and visitors with disabilities (with one carer): 225 RUB**

We recommend that you buy tickets in advance. All ticket categories are available online.

* Students aged 18–25 on production of relevant ID
** Please show proof of eligibility at the cinema entrance