Long Day's Journey Into Night (2018) Poster

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7/10
A luminous esoteric puzzle
Bertaut12 January 2020
Long Day's Journey Into Night is the love child of Andrei Tarkovsky and Kar-Wai Wong, garnished with a truly insane salad-dressing made up of an unholy mixture of filmmakers such as Peter Greenaway, David Lynch, Guy Maddin, and Leos Carax, playwrights Samuel Beckett and Harold Pinter, poet Paul Celan, painters Marc Chagall, Francis Bacon, and Jackson Pollack, and novelists Franz Kafka, Marcel Proust, and Patrick Modiano; not exactly a compendium of the most accessible artists of all time. As unconcerned with formal conventionality as it is with narrative resolution, this is an art-house movie through and through, an esoteric puzzle made up of two distinct parts. Whilst the 2D first half is a measured, but reasonably conventional albeit non-linear noir, the second is composed of an unbroken 50-minute 3D shot that's as aesthetically audacious as it is narratively elliptical. The second feature from 30-year-old self-educated writer/director Bi Gan, Long Day's Journey is aggressively enigmatic, and the absence of character arcs, the formal daring, the languorous pacing, and the resistance to anything approaching definitive conclusions, will undoubtedly see many react with equal parts bafflement and infuriation. However, if you can get past such issues and go with the film on its own terms, you'll find a fascinatingly esoteric examination of the protean nature of memory, a film that in both form and content seems to belie its writer/director's youth and relative inexperience.

Long Day's Journey tells the story of moody loner Luo Hongwu (Jue Huang), a man haunted by his past. In 2000, he met and had a brief but memorable relationship with the mysterious Wan Qiwen (Tang Wei), whom he has never been able to forget. When he returns to his home city of Kaili to bury his father, he sets about trying to track down Qiwen, as the story of their relationship is told via flashbacks. However, it soon becomes apparent that just because Lou remembers a thing doesn't necessarily mean that that thing happened. When his search leads him to a dingy movie theatre, he puts on a pair of 3D glasses and finds himself in an abandoned mine from which his only hope of escape is to win a game of ping pong. The rest of the film takes place in his dream world. Or in the 3D movie playing in the theatre. Or in an amalgamation of both. Or in something else entirely.

Long Day's Journey's biggest selling point is unquestionably the aesthetically audacious second hour. The film starts as a garden variety noir - the world-weary voiceover, the femme fatale revealed through flashbacks, smoke-filled rooms, the back alley meetings, the dangerous gangster, the troubled friend, the darkly fatalistic tone. There's even a clue written on the back of a photo. However, all of these genre markers are jettisoned when Luo enters the cinema, putting on his 3D glasses, just as the audience is prompted to do likewise. The film's title card then appears onscreen for the first time (a full 70 minutes in), and the movie adopts a far more elliptical and esoteric stance than the investigative noir structure of the first half.

Unlike 'single-take' films such as Climax (2018), Utøya 22. juli (2018), and 1917 (2019), which use long-takes and 'hidden' edits to give the effect of a single-shot, the second half of Long Day's Journey follows films such as Russkiy kovcheg (2002) and Victoria (2015) insofar as it was legitimately shot via one single take. And not only that, but it's a complex and visually layered shot too, featuring drones, Steadicams, intricate blocking, elaborate external locations with multitudes of people, practical effects, complex interior locations, even a lengthy sequence set on a zip line. Considering the scope, it would be an impressive enough technological accomplishment in 2D, but that it was filmed with bulky 3D cameras is almost unbelievable, and that three cinematographers worked on the project is unsurprising - Hung-i Yao shot half of the 2D material, Jingsong Dong shot the rest of the 2D material and planned the 3D sequence, whilst David Chizallet actually shot the sequence.

What's especially laudable about the sequence, however, is how it never becomes gimmicky. Most movies released in 3D have no real thematic justification for being in 3D, nothing in their content to justify their form, whilst films such as Victoria have no real thematic justification for being single-shots. Long Day's Journey, however, justifies both decisions - the single-shot works in tandem with the 3D to create a vibrant and complex world of depth and vitality, but one that never seems completely real; there's always the sense of an artifice, something highly 'subjective' getting between the audience and the on-screen images, as if we're not seeing things objectively but instead seeing an individual's interpretation of things - it's reality, but it's mediated reality, with all the subjective distortions that such a thing implies.

This is a film about memory, specifically the idea that memory can be deceptive, and may have as much to do with dreams as with objective reality. In this sequence, as memory, reality, and dream seem to blend into one another, with even identity itself dissolving (several of the main actors re-appear in completely different parts), Gan shows us something that approximates a dream as well as anything you're ever likely to experience, outside actually dreaming. Any film can throw something surreal onscreen and call it a dream scene, but Long Day's Journey manages to convey not just the content of a dream, but the illogical texture of a dream. You replace the 3D images with 2D images, or you replace the single-shot with edited content, and you fundamentally lose that texture; the 3D/single-shot form is as important as James Joyce's removal of punctuation is in creating the impression of a mind on the brink of falling asleep in the last episode of Ulysses (1922) - restore the punctuation, and the interrelatedness of form and content is lost.

Speaking of literature, although the film may seem unrelated to Eugene O'Neill's 1941 play (the Chinese title similarly references a short story collection by Roberto Bolaño), a common theme is memory and the all-consuming power of time. The conventional first half of the film concerns itself not just with memory, but with the imperfect nature of memory, essentially suggesting that obsession is nothing more than a trick of the mind, an attempt to reattain something that may never have existed in the first place (also an important theme in the play). Indeed, it's worth noting that the most recurrent visual motif in the film is that of reflection - not just in mirrors, but so too in puddles, which act as slightly more distorted (subjective?) versions of the relatively perfect reflection one gets from a mirror. So even here, one can see that Gan is examining the distortions of memory and the fault line between objectivity and subjectivity.

All of which will probably go some way to telling you whether or not you're likely to enjoy Long Day's Journey. Make no mistake, this is an esoteric film that isn't especially interested in plot or character, and which uses form to explore complex issues such as memory, subjectivity, and obsession. It's rarely emotionally engaging in a conventional sense and the minimalist plot can result in some rather glib moments. The storyline is elliptical, the characters archetypal, the themes subtle, and, all things considered, the very aspects which one person will find transformative, will completely alienate another. You either embrace the emphasis on mood and tone, or you fight it, trying to find a linear narrative through-line. Personally, I loved its formal daring and admired Gan's confidence and the singularity of his vision, but at the same time, I found each section outstayed it's welcome a little, and felt the first half could lose a good 15 minutes, and the second around 10 or so. Gan also walks a very fine line between emotional detachment and emotional alienation, and it's a line he crosses a couple of times. Nevertheless, this is an awe-inspiring technical achievement, an ultra-rare example of a film which perfectly matches form to content, and a fascinating puzzle that trades in the undefinable nuances of memory. If you have the patience to work with it, the rewards are many.
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8/10
Reality and Dream
vanadium-zhang3 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
In the first part, the reality entwined with Luo's memory of the summer 12 years ago. Luo Hongwu is a man that has lost everything: his dead father, his long-gone mother, his no where lover, his divorced wife, his unborn son, and his murder friend Wildcat. He sank into his memory like a stone, so he escaped to his dream to redeem his mistakes. He saw his son or Wildcat is alive, the gang was easy to defeat; He helped his mother go with the honey man and knew; He helped his lover fly away from the trap and win the true love. The innovative 60 minutes 3D long short makes the dream so realistic, while Luo's memory and reality is potraited as a dream. In the end, the firework is still kindling. Will it die out or will it keep burning? Will the dream end or will it last forever?
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7/10
Do Not Watch If Sleepy
evanston_dad10 January 2020
Caution...do not watch this movie if you're already sleepy, like I was.

I'd read enough about this film to know not to try too hard to understand it and just go with the flow. But even at that, I feel like I didn't figure out how to watch it until about the half-way mark....which is when the film's opening title appears on screen, if that gives you some idea about what to expect.

Those who become frustrated with this aggressively non-linear film may be tempted to dismiss it as a bunch of random disconnected scenes that don't add up to anything. Actually, I think the movie is very carefully constructed, using visual and thematic motifs (like apples, for instance) to connect one part to another. It's as close to a visual poem as you'll find short of an outright experimental film, where recurring images and sensations replace narrative storytelling.

It's a movie that I would probably get more out of by watching multiple times, when I can focus less on trying to figure out what's happening and more on the little clues dropped here and there to guide the viewer on his merry way. But here's the thing....this movie didn't pull me in enough the first time to make me want to put the energy into watching it again. It tries for dreamy, hypnotic, and romantic, but it only succeeded in being one out of the three for me, and there was something sort of coldly formal about it. Take, for example, the oft-mentioned final hour of the film, which unspools as one crazy complicated long take (and apparently was in 3D in the theater). It's impressive for sure, but it's also a stunt. I found myself paying attention to the technical considerations that went into pulling it off rather than anything really happening on the screen. And the whole movie is kind of like that. It didn't leave me puzzling over its enigmatic mysteries. It left me wondering "hmmm....wonder how they did THAT."

Grade: B+
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9/10
I am Chinese and I love It!
o-909622 January 2019
Everyone reading this review, please forgive me for my perhaps strange sounding english, I'm from and currently lives in China.

I saw this film today at a Local Cinema, in Dongguan, I must say I feel very fortunate having seen this, and also Jia Zhang Ke's "Ash is the Purest White" in Cinema, normally in China, we only screen Popcorn Films, but never Art films. I heard about Longest Day's Journey into the night a long time ago, when I found out this Chinese movie was competing for 2018's Cannes Un Certain Regard! By the way, the chinese name of the film, "di qiu zui hou de ye wan", actually means Earth's Last Night, or Last Night on Earth, what an awesome name!

Words cannot describe what this movie is like, or how awesome it is, At least this is so for me, I simply cannot do it with words, but I believe this actually proves how good this movie is, since if words can describe it, it wouldn't have accomplished its goal, the goal of motion picture, as a medium of art, is to express something that language cannot express, just like Beethoven's Symphonies, or Monet's paintings.

Many People won't understand this movie, because they're not Chinese, they don't understand how the subtle details in this movie reminds us of our country, and even if chinese audiences are watching it, like the few that watched it with me tonight, won't get it, because most Chinese people have almost no exposure to Art House Cinema, they usually watch 3 types of movies, Hollywood Action Flicks, Romantic Comedy, or Horror, that's it.

The Film Score in this movie is also awesome, Bela Bartok wanted to write Hungarian Themed Muisc in the western classical fasion, the soundtrack in this movie is somewhat like Bartok's, they have the same goal, this movie's music comprise of Electronic Music featuring themes in the style of music from China's minor ethnic cultures, this, plus the hour long single take dream sequence, make this film so rare a work of art, that it deserves to be charished.

Despite the dream-like scenes, and experimental techniques, the film actually captured realistically what contemporary rural china is like, which is rare, but it's nothing like our urban areas right now, if anyone wants to see a good film featuring modern china's major cities, I suggests the Chinese TV Comedy Drama: "Pretty Li Hui Zhen", it's very cheezy and childlish, but the portrayal of Shanghai is very realistic!

Thanks for reading!

Ni Guang Xin
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7/10
Truly dazzling and unforgettable, yet lacking in plot delivery
kim_smoltz3 June 2019
"Long Day's Journey Into Night" is a dazzling and captivating look into the mind of one man's obsession with a woman who disappeared inexplicably from his life several years ago, and his odyssey to uncover her current location. As China's most financially successful arthouse release in history, foreign audiences will be equally captivated by this admittedly strange film's humanity, surrealism, and bizarre familiarity.

I first came to hear of this film after reading the extraordinary hype around its cinematography, which features a staggering 55-minute long cut that continues until the end of the film. Let me be abundantly clear that every ounce of this hype is deserved; perhaps even an understatement.

"Long Day's Journey" is quite possibly the most aesthetically beautiful film I've ever seen. If not, it is certainly in the top five. Nearly every single frame of this film looks like it could belong in an art museum. It is shot impeccably, without error, for its entire 133 minute runtime. The cinematographers -- of which there are three -- heavily rely on color contrast, distortion in the shape of oscillating water, gorgeous close-ups, and slow dollying. It attaches itself effortlessly to the film's dreamlike tone, like two perfect jigsaw pieces. It's a platitude, I know -- but it has to be seen to be believed. If there's any justice in the world, "Long Day's Journey" will be shown in college cinematography classes around the world for decades to come.

The film jumps back and forth from present day to roughly 20 years prior, when our protagonist Luo Hongwu (Huang Jue) was spending time with his since long-lost love, Wan Qiwen (Tang Wei). The cuts that change time periods are not always recognizable, and the overall delivery of the plot is muddled at times. I think that these subtle cuts were an intentional decision by the director, Bi Gan, to preserve a sense of dreamlike continuity that works in favor of the film's tone. Unfortunately, it messed with the overall comprehension of the plot -- at times it was unclear if the action on-screen was supposed to be occuring in present day, or in the past. About 30 minutes into the film, I noticed that Hongwu's facial hair was slightly different depending on the time frame; once I figured this out, the unclear timeline wasn't a huge issue for me. At the same time, I can completely understand why some would be utterly baffled by the film because of this. The two poor people who sat behind me never figured it out, frequently making comments about how confused they were, and I can't blame them.

But at the same time, "Long Day's Journey" isn't truly about the plot. It's about a man's mind, and the feelings of beauty, pain, darkness, and light that comes with the notion of loving someone you should've moved on from a decade ago. In a way, the cinematography and the fantastic score are the true "directors" of the film, and bring these themes to life even more than the plot itself.

The final 55 minutes of the film -- the long cut I mentioned earlier -- is a clear break from the rest of the film; an "epilogue" if you will. It is entirely surreal, perhaps even nonsensical, and heavily alludes to themes and symbolism from the first 90ish minutes...similar to a dream you might have about the day you just lived through. The ending of the film is ambiguous and open to interpretation, like all dreams are. To that end, if I had to describe the entire film in one word, it would certainly be "dreamlike."

This isn't a film for everybody, and that's okay. If you're turned off by nonlinear storytelling, "Long Day's Journey" won't do you any favors; it's not nearly as cohesive and accessible as other films that use the same format. However, I'd reckon that even if you had a difficult time understanding the plot, the overall tone and cinematography will guide you through the rest of the film. If you leave with nothing else, you'll have seen one of the most visually beautiful films of all time.

Take it to the bank, you'll see this film in the running for Best Foreign Film at the Oscars next year.
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10/10
Trying and trying to re-inhabit a remembered love
dennis-1134526 April 2019
Have you ever found yourself wandering the corridors of your mind searching for someone you started to love perhaps ten or twenty years ago, before a disruption? Have you found yourself going "room to room" in memory? Or, in imagination, sketching variations of what could have happened? Or how you could still get together? The peculiar way time passes and doesn't, repeats and doesn't. Would she recognize you? Would you recognize her? And how would you describe what this longing tastes like? If you wanted to express this taste, this mood, could film be the medium of choice? Could film have the potential to be more poetic than poetry? How many conventions of box office narrative would you need to discard?

4.26.19 Here in LA no one is daring to compete with the release of Avengers Endgame. Except for Warriors vs. Clippers and a masterpiece from China: "A Long Day's Journey into Night" (misnomer). Seen it twice. For now let's just say: in a virtuosic display of movement, space, time, light, color, felt sense -- sprouting partly from some seeds scattered in Tarkovsky's Stalker -- it's the lived experience of the self as it tries and tries to re-inhabit a remembered love. Got plans for the weekend?
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7/10
Great Chinese Art Film
socrates429 April 2020
This film (which bears absolutely no resemblance to the well-known play with which it shares a title) is first and foremost an art film. Rather than containing a logical story, it is more about mood, tone, and memory. But it captures those things about as well as any film ever has.

It borrows a great deal from previous films in the art genre, including THE MIRROR as well as the films of Wong Kar-wai and Apichatpong Weerasethakul. So if you enjoy those kinds of films, this one is for you. It also has one of the best dream sequences of all time. Recommend for fans of Asian art films.
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8/10
Vertiginous Labyrinth of Reflected Memories
Cineanalyst7 July 2020
"Long Day's Journey Into Night," alternatively known as "Last Evenings on Earth," indeed, is a bewildering movie. Partially, I consider it even a mind-game, or puzzle, picture, as defined by the likes of Thomas Elsaesser. Yet, while there are other avenues through which to interpret it all, and there are some other, fine reviews that do just that, the main means by which I came to grips with Bi Gan's enigmatic tour de force is by way of Alfred Hitchcock's "Vertigo" (1958). Most movies are memories of other movies to a large extent, with the originality being in the re-arrangement, or remembrance, of the former one. Even many supposedly "revolutionary" reels are such in the original sense of the word of returning to a prior place. Undoubtedly, there are other demonstrable influences here, which others have mentioned, including the films of Andrei Tarkovsky and Wong Kar-wai, and there's also the emphasis on the green book doubling the picture's alternate titles that recall the prose of Eugene O'Neill's play and a short story by Roberto Bolaño. Perhaps, if not surely, due to my greater familiarity with Hitchcock's film than with some of those other benchmarks, the prominent references to "Vertigo," however, especially stand out here. Most blatant of these are the woman's green dress and the much-imitated revolving "Vertigo" kiss near the end. More vitally, this reflexivity aids in making sense of the picture.

"Vertigo" is a more accessible and mainstream film that has been around for a long time, infinitely analyzed and so is seemingly easier to decipher. It's a stolen love story, as is the stolen green book here, as is "Long Day's Journey Into Night," despite the supposed deception of its marketing campaign that brought in the lion's share of its box office. Both are shadowy noir (reinforced by the voiceover narration here) in vibrant color where the detective protagonist searches for, to reclaim, that past, lost and stolen love. He is thrust into a vertiginous maze of spinning doppelgängers, dreams, ghosts, memories, time and regrets. Hitchcock's hero literally experienced debilitating vertigo, as well as a psychotic break, amid the rolling hills of San Francisco and up the bell tower; whereas in Bi's picture, the green book's spell is said to make the room spin and spinning a ping-pong paddle makes one fly over the labyrinths of staircases and mineshafts of Guizhou province where the hero here follows in circles redoubled ghosts and women.

As with "Vertigo," too, this one is split into two parts. In the first part, for both of them, the detective shadows the woman, or femme fatale, and investigates the mystery at hand. More so with Hitchcock's camera, but here, too, this is largely composed of the system of looks Laura Mulvey termed the "male gaze." With Hitchcock, this took the form of shots/countershots--i.e. shot of man looking followed by shot of woman he's looking at. Bi doesn't work in the tradition of classical continuity editing to emerge from Hollywood back in the 1910s and which largely continues to this day, though. His, one might say, international art-house style is of a slow cinema (I would agree oft too slow--that elevator lift sequence where the camera operator blatantly waits for his seat to track the character down especially tries the spectator's patience), where mise-en-scène takes prominence over montage. In lieu of edited scene dissection, however, there is camera movement, as well as the role of the camera in shifting between a neutral observer and a shared perspective with a character--almost always the male protagonist. Hence, we see shots of women where the man's presence is acknowledged as off-screen, out of frame, sharing his and the camera's gaze with the spectator. Frequently, these views are photographed through glass, mirrors and puddle reflections, to reinforce the voyeurism and the intentionally artificial perspective as seen through one character and the camera's lens.

This first part is fragmented, non-linear and, here, as based on memories as rusty as the otherwise perplexing views in the movie of rust and damp and dilapidated structures. Clocks are broken. Rain drops. Makeup smeared. Trains stopped by the dislodging of mudslides. Earth mined out. A glass falling off the table to shatter into pieces. Perhaps, this reflects the chaptered, at the reader's own pace, nature of written stories and even told ones, remembered as they are--many characters telling each other stories or stories about being told stories in this one. Thus, the focus on the green book, as well as the photographic snapshot hidden within a broken clock, in the first part. In "Vertigo," too, there was the art of painting, the appreciation by one of the women (Judy) and the designing of by the other (Midge). In both pictures, then, they move from watching, from voyeurism--that is, from our position as spectator--to filmmaking itself in their second parts.

The break in "Long Day's Journey Into Night" is even greater than the nightmare of "Vertigo," with the putting on of the glasses for its virtuoso 59-minute one-shot in 3D and the delayed reveal of the title. This is the Buster Keaton in "Sherlock Jr." (1924) moment (or is it the reverse of "The Purple Rose of Cairo" (1985)?), where he enters the movie of the cinema he's sitting in, watching and dreaming, recalling past movies and other artworks as we should've been following along with, too, throughout. It's where extraordinary planning and nimbleness in tracking with the bulky 3D camera meets the dolly-out combined with zoom-ins of the "Vertigo" effect shots, along with its dream sequence visuals and even those dated rear-projection process shots. Showy, sure, even, perhaps, distracting, but the effects have their functions. Motion pictures depict time like no other art form. It may be cut up (as in "Vertigo"), fragmented beyond the point of normal narrative (the first part here), and presented in real time. Characters continually followed and reappearing (including that humorous donkey), mazes unraveled, the past revealed in cinematic ghosts and the doppelgänger characters of the already reproduced images of motion pictures. Karaoke kept on track by pre-recorded music. "Vertigo" kiss. A firework marking the passing of time.

I'm not quite sure this is a great movie so much as it's a great mystery story--perhaps, such distinction is needless. I mean, the cinematography is some of the best in recent memory, but the deconstruction of its function and that of the narrative itself seems far more rewarding than any mystery therein. It's hard to say that anything meaningful comes from the realization of the child as a ghost from a past murder, the mother and the femme fatale, or the woman of his dreams reappearing, let alone whether what the protagonist experiences is dream or reality. "Mind-game films," for which such checks several boxes, weren't a theoreticized genre in Hitchcock's day. There's hardly any of the psychosexual pervsity found underneath "Vertigo" here, Mulvey's psychoanalytic junk regarding castration anxiety and all included (the limbs of Jimmy Stewart broken were never as vital to the story as they were as metaphor). Hitchcock's film was a mature work, recalling memories of his past features (namely, "Rear Window" (1954)), whereby he reconstructed those dreams and remembrances, remaking his trademarks such as the Hitchcock blonde in the process. Never bravado for its own sake. Nary an obscure reference necessitating shared eclectic tastes. Little lingering to force confronting the confusion of the picture's lack.

Nevertheless, to say "Long Day's Journey Into Night" doesn't rise to the level of "Vertigo" is a slight criticism, indeed. It remains a picture of many levels to appreciate. Even if sense can't be made of it, there are beautiful compositions and motifs, staggering craft and intelligent themes to admire. The destination doesn't so much matter, except that it's exquisite, too, for the journey is what's important. Not so much what was or will be--paying much head to the story here seems an errant errand--but how, including the cinematic reflexivity, one remembers and dreams.
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7/10
Rare consequential use of 3-D
Bachfeuer21 October 2018
I was ten years old in 1953 during the first heyday of 3-D movies. In the years since the novelty wore off, I have been sadly disappointed how few and far between memorable ones have been. WINGS OF COURAGE, POLAR EXPRESS, HUGO, AVATAR, THE FINEST HOURS and this film are pretty much the lot. Nevertheless, there is ubiquitous movie house 3-D capability, and lots of cheesy up-conversions of films made neither in nor for 3-D to occupy them. Alas, serious film makers have generally concluded that 3-D adds too little value to be worth the trouble.

LONG DAY'S JOURNEY is a live action evocation of a Munga-style comic. The second half is a dream sequence, set apart by what must be the first 3-D ever done with steady-cam. The story and characters did not particularly resonate with me. The many filmgoers who have never had the opportunity to see the "classics" of 3-D properly exhibited can recapture a good deal of the excitement here.
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3/10
Emptiness dressed as enigma
simodeev21 July 2019
Yes. It has gorgeous cinematography. Yes, there's an hour long single-take shot. Well done.

The Director mistakes aesthetics as the driving force behind his idols, who very much seem to be Tarkovsky, Tarr, Weeresethekul, Angelopolous, Wong Kar-Wai, Tsai Ming-Liang and David Lynch. That's fine, great influences, but what he doesn't understand is those Directors were motivated by much more than 'creating a hypnotic dream world'. Their themes, concerns and questions seep through their films in a tangible way, making us FEEL.

Go on, I dare you to find an interview or article surrounding this film goes beyond being wowed by the admitted technical prowess of the one-take shot, or some utterly vague discussion of memory and dream.

There's nothing of worth to feel or grasp here, the puzzles, recurring motifs and characters amount to nothing.
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10/10
I don't fully understand it. but my heart is touched deeply.
piztol769 January 2019
I don't remember any other movie like a dream so much.
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6/10
"One day she told me she was going for a walk. And she never came back."
classicsoncall28 December 2019
Warning: Spoilers
This film is at once easy and difficult to understand. Luo Hongwu's (Jue Huang) reveries of lost love form the basis of the plot, but the meandering nature of the picture can leave one frustrated and impatient. The various scenarios presented seemingly have no relation to each other, though they ultimately result in bridging an arc Luo traverses to locate someone from his past, resulting in new found love in the present. Much of the picture conveys a dream like quality, particularly in those instances relating to magic spells that transport Luo and Kaizhen mystically above a village. That the characters of Wan Qiwen and Kaizhen are both portrayed by actress Wei Tang is meant to add further ambiguity to an already dense cinematic treatment, and it's no surprise that the film was met with derision during it's much hailed general release to the Chinese public. Apparently there's little difference between Chinese and Western viewers who consider art house films to be for the snobbish elite who have a way of pretending there's substance in a film devoid of any. At least the story ended with a kiss and a sparkler in the night, which is what I aspire to on any given evening.
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3/10
Just an imitation of being artsy
majid-arianejad20 April 2019
Warning: Spoilers
I'm bothering to comment on this movie because I noticed some critics compared him to Tarkovsky and Wong Kar Wai. There are a few things I like to comment:

  • It's not there is no plot. There is a plot but the director did all his best, by many jump cuts and flashbacks, not to give it to you and I was confused why? Is it a new form of art to have tens of flashbacks?


  • Unrealistic characters and sloppy connection between them. There are many useless characters introduced to say one or more sentences and they are gone. The lady in jail, the lady who got the restaurant, two punks at the poll table. Remove them and nothing will happen. For example, the guy asks the lady in jail that why are you here. She say for many things: theft, counterfeit IDs, etc. I'm not sure what was the use of this dialogue and how the movie is impacted if remove it is removed.


  • useless long shot. Why the hell I need to watch a guy biting on an apple for 3 minutes? Was that necessary to watch that long shot to know about the importance of apple in the movie?


  • unnecessary use of 3D. Does the director think if the second part wasn't shot in 3D we couldn't get that's the dream.


  • and many more elements (i.e. the narration, music, lighting) that their contributions to the essence and the message is not clear and straightforward.


  • HORRIBLE ENGLISH SUBTITLES. It seems all dialogues were translated with a software. That is fine but please ask someone to review and correct the rubbish translation. There are many cases of using non common vocabularies in the subtitles that kill the mood and sounds funny. I am not sure if it's common to say:
"it's raining take care driving" "grown moon" "she vanished and reappeared" and many more.
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10/10
Utterly Poetic
vidalianose5 August 2019
Comparisons to Tarkovsky are entirely valid, and I think Tarkovsky was a genius. This film reverberates universally. Believe me, that is very rare. One does not have to be Chinese to understand it, but for Westerners, please look up some of the symbolism. Consider Western mythologies as well. For example, meeting with the Minotaur, who may be the protagonist's deceased friend and/or family patriarch. This film successfully binds past, present and future in the way that only the best poetry and folklore can. Granted, for a full understanding of nuance, being Chinese would help, but I feel everyone can grasp the essence. It is at once a love story, multigenerational and quintessentially human. I noted the ethnic musical entries mentioned by another reviewer. Fantastic and effective. The results aurally, visually, and in storyline makes this a truly pan-human tale. Please watch it without expectation!
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6/10
And it was all a dream
deastman_uk28 December 2019
This Chinese film doesn't quite fall into Tartovsky or even David Lynch territory ( actually it is more in keeping with Momento) but it is obtuse enough to even confound an arthouse crowd. For technical reasons, the german film Victoria also comes to mind, as it also is largely based on a single tracking shot.

The dream that winds around itself with constant references - in some respects it may be easier to follow with subtitles, as it is harder for text to slip by you - produces some very strong cinematography that is at first shot by shot, followed at the end by a single take from a very young director - but clearly experienced camera crew.

After returning home, a man searches for either a lover, or a friend, but we are already in a dream world either inhabiting the past, or reliving the past. People are often ciphers for other people in this mis-remembered past, where most objects reappear elsewhere almost like an adventure game. There isn't too much heavy metaphor - although a broken watch for being stuck in time is pretty silly - so like every film these days, you probably have to see it again to pick up on everything. Honey, apples, green things, red things, ping-pong, cells, tunnels, winter, summer, dilapidation, trucks - loads of things are connected to and through the past in a recurring dream that you know won't go anywhere.
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8/10
Great movie
I had a hard time following the first half of the movie, it felt more like shattered memories than cohesive story/narrative. It felt to long although it had it's moments like the karaoke part... Then that one hour long take came and it blew me away. The camerawork and visuals in this movie are astonishing, it added to that hypnotizing feeling of the whole movie. With few rewatched the rating might go up!
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A narrative disaster
TheBigSick12 January 2019
There are too many flashbacks and voice-overs. The editing is a mess. The narrative is a disaster. Nobody know what it is talking about. Simply put, there is no plot. The character development is confusing as well.
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6/10
Bi Tri-Hard
anthonyjlangford23 August 2019
The director wants to be the new Andrei Tarkovsky but comes off as a transparent try-hard.

There are some very accomplished technical camera achievements but they do little to serve the story, such as it is, but seemingly are there for their own sake. The characters are dull and lifeless and we do not understand why the central character's obsession is so strong. From the flashbacks the romance is thin and without passion. The situations are often false, as though wanting to be mysterious or quirky for its own sake and not without any genuine merit.

The film is gorgeous to look at but really that's all it is. It does not contain true ethereal power such as to be found in the aforementioned Russian director's films.

If you want to see a truly original director at work watch An Elephant Sitting Still. Such a shame that director took his own life, as his was an original talent.
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8/10
Poignant and poetic
codseyes20 March 2019
An unexpected gem, reminded me of early Wim Wenders or Jadorowsky. Obviously it's not a linear plot set in everyday reality, something that some reviewers seem to have not understood. It's metaphysical references resonate more and more strongly - mortality and transience, love and loss. It's disconcerting and haunting, very original.
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7/10
A Chinese new wave of films
frankde-jong15 July 2019
A man goes back to his home village because his father died. Sounds like "Cinema Paradiso" (1988, Giuseppe Tornatore)?

In his hometown he is haunted by memories of an old friend who died under suspect circumstances and a mysterious woman. Sounds like a film noir?

"Long day's journey into night" is neither. The film has much more in common with "In the mood for love" (2000, Wong Kar Wai, sultry but platonic relationship) and "Stalker" (1979, Andrei Tarkovsky, fickleness of memories).

When I became a film buff in the beginning of the '90s, it was the highday of the 5th generation of directors in China (most notably Zhang Yimou). In 2019 there is again a Chinese new wave with films as "Long day's journey into night" and "An elephant sitting still" (2018, Bo Hu). Is this the 6th generation or maybe already the 7th?
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5/10
'Everything about you is a mystery'...
Xstal14 May 2020
A master code-breaker would struggle to extract and absorb too much meaning from this extremely stamina sapping film and, if they did, it would probably differ considerably from your abstraction and interpretations. I fancy there's a hint of the emperor's new clothes lurking somewhere beneath the surface and beneath that surface is a void as deep as the Mariana Trench, thereby impressive in its scale but ultimately an illusion as shallow as a paddy field.
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9/10
A dream creator
user-100-12911812 June 2019
The plot of the movie is less important. It's about the inner growth and reconciliation with one's past. However, the ambience created by the 1-hour-long single shot (unlike the Birdman, which was edited in the middle in one of the transitional scene) was really a dream for the audience. Can't appreciate the acting and directing more.
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6/10
Long Day's Journey Into... Confusion
Turin_Horse9 July 2019
I have mixed feeling towards this movie, it has undoubtedly a Tarkovskyan air, and while I very much appreciate some Tarkovsky's films (Solaris, Andrei Rublev, Sacrifice), I consider others are just empty boxes (The Mirror, Nostalghia), and unfortunately this film resembles more the latter. Let's say in the first place that the cinematography is rather good, creating an atmosphere that goes to and fro the protagonist mind and invites to reflection. However, there seems not to be much more than this premise in the long footage of the film. While the idea of moving apart from reality to introduce us into a dream (shot in 3D) where the protagonist seems to find a more solid asset to fulfil his wishes may be original and appealing, the overal result of the film feels flawed and... yes, empty. The first part of the film, which presumably describes real events, looks as much a dream as the second (supposedly dreamy) part, it is confusing, muddled, disjointed... as a dream actually. Paradoxically the second part is more straight and comprehensible (shot in a single take of nearly one hour), showing straightforward carachters that seem to fulfil the protagonist's "dreams": a guy who helps him go where he wants by sort of magic; an attractive young common girl in a red dress, which points to sexual desire and may reflect the protagonist's wishes about meeting again his 20-years ago-gone love and expecting she remains as attractive as she was, but this time more attainable and lacking the intriguing air she possessed; a gang of easily defeatable guys, so unlike the real mafia dudes of the first part...). Who was Wildcat by the way and what role did he have in the film...??? Well, I suppose I would need a second view of the film, maybe even a third one, but frankly I do not consider worthy watching a film twice just for the sake of the director's deliberate intention of making it difficult to understand (I feel he is just trying to collect more money with such a trick).

Did you feel my comment confusing?... well, you may expect exactly the same from the film, I have just tried to reflect what the film is like transcribed into words (but maybe I also have failed in doing so...)
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2/10
Senseless
nicolamietta-118 December 2020
What is the meaning of this boring non-sense movie ?????If someone would like to explain..... Probably the most boring movie I ever watched. Don't waist your precious time, pass away.
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10/10
It's an absolute masterpiece.
lylesetnikking9 May 2020
This film moves very slowly, and at times you doubt the reason for its such slow pacing, until about an hour and fifteen minutes into the film, where every single thing you have been shown, both in realism and in noir, pay off in ways you couldn't possibly imagine. It is a film about memory and capturing memory on film. It is stuck in my mind permanently.
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