Year:2007
                        
                          
                            
                            
                            
                            
                             
                            Whispers and Moans theatrical poster,  Athena Chu takes a swim,  
                            Mandy Chiang checks in via her mobile, and  
                            Monie Tung gets a talking to from mama-san Candy Yu.
                          Availability:
                            DVD 
                            Region 0 NTSC
                            Mei Ah Entertainment
                            16x9 Anamorphic Widescreen
                            Cantonese and Mandarin Language Tracks
                            Dolby Digital 5.1
                            Removable English and Chinese Subtitles
Director:Herman Yau Lai-To
Cast:Athena Chu Yan, Candy Yu On-On, Mandy Chiang Nga-Man, Yan Ng Yat-Yin, Monie Tung Man-Lei, Misia Chan Mei-Hei, Don Li Yat-Long, Patrick Tang Kin-Won, Ken Lo Wai-Kwong, Karen Tong Bo-Yu, Bonnie Wong Man-Wai, Kenny Wong Tak-Bun, Emotion Cheung Kam-Ching
Description:
Herman 
                            Yau attempts a social message with the prostitute 
                            drama Whispers and Moans. Based on a book of 
                            interviews by Yang Yee-Shan , Whispers details a cross-section 
                            of sex industry workers in modern Hong Kong, all facing 
                            difficult change in the rapidly evolving sex trade. 
                            Chief among them is Coco , a veteran mama-san, 
                            or a supervisor in a hostess club whose girls engage 
                            in a higher-regarded form of prostitution than your 
                            Temple Street-treading streetwalkers. Coco handles 
                            the girls' club assignments and eventual "take 
                            out" orders. While tawdry sounding, this is supposedly 
                            the higher end of the sex trade, though you wouldn't 
                            know it from the way the girls get treated. Work is 
                            hell, and these girls do quite a bit of work.
                                 The hostess club where Coco 
                            and fellow mama-san Jenny  work is in danger 
                            of closing, meanwhile the girls working for them have 
                            a variety of personal and professional issues to deal 
                            with. Nana  is a dour prostitute with 
                            a loving boyfriend who has no idea what she does for 
                            a living. Meanwhile, Nana's sister Aida  
                            is a heroin addict, which destroys her cred at the 
                            club, leading to her eventual fall to drug-addled 
                            streetwalker. Coco has her own problems; both of her 
                            sugardaddies seem to be straying, plus she may have 
                            contracted syphilis from one of them, possibly putting 
                            her young daughter at risk, too. All this plus your 
                            standard work hazards, e.g. lousy customers, lost 
                            opportunities, etc.
                                 Whispers and Moans 
                            is an ensemble piece, crisscrossing between its various 
                            interrelated players, each weathering the challenges 
                            of being a whore in today's Hong Kong. Aside from 
                            human relationship and job hazard issues, the girls 
                            must deal with the influx of Mainland prostitutes, 
                            who generally are cheaper and approach the job with 
                            much more enthusiasm than the cynical Hong Kong locals. 
                            The male sex workers have issues too; Tony  is a successful, but self-loathing gigolo who 
                            takes out his frustration by buying the time of his 
                            female colleagues and berating them verbally. He's 
                            in a loving relationship with Jo , a transvestite 
                            prostitute who's saving up for a proper sex change 
                            operation, and may have stolen one of Coco's boyfriends.
                                Jo has the potential to be portrayed 
                            as a cartoon, especially given the disbelief that 
                            must be suspended to buy into Don Li's performance. 
                            However, staying real is one of Herman Yau's strengths. 
                            Yau doesn't sensationalize or overdramatize his subjects - at least from a directorial standpoint. Yau may 
                            not use manufactured style to sell his material, but 
                            the material itself is a little too rough to be easily 
                            digestible. Yan Ng plays Elsie, a crusading social 
                            worker who's trying to get the girls to buy into a 
                            new "Sex Workers Union", the benefit being 
                            they can develop pride in their work, and fight for 
                            more recognition from the public. Elsie gets to deliver 
                            numerous speeches on her crusade, which become didactic 
                            in their long-winded optimism.
                                 Yan plays the character with 
                            less-than-obvious self-assurance, however, meaning 
                            the other characters can jump all over her - which 
                            they do. Much of her talk of paying tribute to Hong 
                            Kong's tireless sex workers gets rebuked, frequently 
                            by the workers themselves, who either become annoyed 
                            at her idealism, or simply talk about how they have 
                            other motives for being prostitutes. That opens up 
                            the film for, unfortunately, even more long-winded 
                            speeches where characters go on and on about how they 
                            love being prostitutes, or are pissed that others 
                            take their jobs, or how they never intended for their 
                            lives to end up this way, etc., etc. There's an appreciable 
                            honesty to the situations, but not everything is introduced 
                            organically. The situations speak volumes, but the 
                            characters speak even more; sometimes, all the audience 
                            can do is listen patiently. After a while, your ears 
                            might get tired.
                                 Yau's attempt at thoughtful 
                            filmmaking partially redeems Whispers and Moans, 
                            which has the tools to be a dark, relevant social 
                            drama. It certainly sets up all the situations, and 
                            gives the actors enough to work with. Unfortunately, 
                            something about the film seems lacking. The weight 
                            of these sex workers' lives seems obvious and real, 
                            but the situations aren't capitalized upon, and when 
                            the sadness-tinged final moments arrive, the film 
                            doesn't seem to affect as much as it could have. The 
                            situations are potent, but the characters feel more 
                            like mouthpieces, and not enough is felt when some 
                            of them meet their fates. Whispers and Moans 
                            lacks a power or rawness that would convince us that 
                            its "sex workers need respect" message is 
                            strong enough to carry the whole film. The film feels 
                            real, but it lacks immediacy.
                                 However, the film does 
                            succeed at sustaining interest, as the details can 
                            certainly affect or even enlighten. The actors vary 
                            in effectiveness, with some players  lending veteran presence, and others 
                            managing decent supporting turns. The weak link is 
                            Mandy Chiang, whose inner emotions seem more inert 
                            than tortured. As is usual with a Herman Yau production, 
                            the performances are more natural than they are constructed, 
                            and the rough edges manage to lend an air of spontaneous 
                            authenticity. That is, until the personal speeches 
                            start going on far too long, which is when the film 
                            loses the reality its created. Filmmakers need to 
                            seduce an audience into buying in to get them to pay 
                            attention to soul-searching monologues or sociopolitical 
                            pulpit pounding. Whispers and Moans certainly 
                            does interest, but does it seduce? Not really. 
                                 Whispers and Moans 
                            may also frustrate those enticed by its Category III 
                            rating. The rating is earned thanks to its frank discussion 
                            of adult subject matter - though the application 
                            of said rating is most definitely a local rather than 
                            an international standard. Filmgoers should think 
                            twice if they think Whispers and Moans will 
                            be the second coming of PR Girls. Nobody flashes 
                            a breast here and the most titillating image of Athena 
                            Chu is when she's wearing a bikini right before she 
                            pisses in the pool, possibly infecting someone with 
                            syphilis. If that sounds titillating to you, then 
                            we suggest that you don't share that feeling with 
                            others. From likely a more common standpoint, it's 
                            not titillating at all, and neither is the whole of 
                            Whispers and Moans. This is the type of film 
                            where drug use and sleeping with the wrong customers 
                            can lead to bad, bad times, and prostitution is a 
                            real matter and not some idealized fantasy. Basically, 
                            if you're looking for tawdry thrills, check out real 
                            adult movies and not this questionably successful, 
                            but well-intentioned Hong Kong film.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment