|
 |
2046 Awards
The camera points to the left side of Faye Wong's face when she cries. She
has problems crying with her right eye, so Wong Kar-Wai shot her crying
scenes on the left side of her face.
While 2046 was being filmed, a photographer from Sudden Weekly, a Hong Kong
tabloid, bribed his way onto the set. After his pictures of the interior of
the Oriental Hotel were published, 'Wong Kar Wai' ordered the set to be
rebuilt. The photographer was subsequently sentenced to three months' jail
for corruption.
First Wong Kar-Wai film to be photographed in widescreen (2.39:1 projected
aspect ratio), and the first to be photographed using anamorphic lenses.
Each character speaks their own languages. Mr. Chow speaks Cantonese, Bai
Ling speaks Mandarin, and Tak speaks Japanese even when talking to each
other. Even so, they seem to understand each other perfectly.
The title of the film is supposed to be said as, "Two Oh Four Six."
Originally conceived as a story of a hit man in Bangkok (hence the casting
of Thai actor Bird Thongchai McIntyre). The hit man was to be played by
Japanese superstar Takuya Kimura, and the events to be played out in a hotel
in room 2046.
Production was shut down during the SARS epidemic in March 2003.
The print for Cannes arrived three hours before the delayed premier,
escorted by police. It is the first film in Cannes' history to arrive so
late that re-schedulings were necessary.
The title of the film refers to the last year before the 50-year period the
Chinese Government promised to let Hong Kong remain as it is. Hong Kong was
returned to China in 1997.
In one of the original versions, Tony Leung was to play a futuristic
postman.
The director declined the invitation to screen the film in the New York Film
Festival.
Was supposed to be the closing film of the Edinburgh Film Festival.
|