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Lust, Caution Wikipedia film pages
Lust, Caution
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
For the 2007 film adaptation by Ang Lee, see Lust, Caution (film).
Lust, Caution
Author
Eileen Chang
Translator
Julia Lovell
Lust, Caution (Chinese: 色,戒; pinyin: Sè, Jiè) is a novella by the Chinese writer Eileen Chang, first published in 1979. It is set in Shanghai, Republic of China during World War II. Reportedly, the short story "took Chang more than two decades to complete".[1]
Contents [hide]
1 Plot summary
2 Characters
3 English translations
4 Adaptations
5 References
Plot summary[edit]
In China, during the Japanese occupation in World War II, a young student and former actress named Wong Chia Chi has agreed to be the central figure in the assassination of a Japanese collaborator, Yee. Using the alias of Mak Tai Tai (Mrs. Mak) and the fictional Mr. Mak, Chia Chi befriends Mr. Yee's wife, Yee Tai Tai, and eventually seduces her husband in order to kill him. However, she falls in love with him and just before her comrades try to kill him, she warns him. He escapes and has the whole group executed, including Wong Chia Chi.
Characters[edit]
Wang Chia Chi aka Mak Tai Tai
Mr. Yee
Yee Tai Tai
Mr. Maki
Kuang Yu Min
Wu
Liang Jun Sheng
English translations[edit]
Lust, Caution was not published in English until 2007.
1.Lust, Caution (色,戒). Translated by Julia Lovell. New York: Anchor Books, 2007. ISBN 978-0-307-38744-8.
2.Lust, Caution: The Story, the Screenplay, and the Making of the Film. Translated by Julia Lovell. New York: Pantheon Books, 2007. ISBN 978-0-375-42524-0.
Adaptations[edit]
For the 2007 film by Ang Lee, see Lust, Caution (film).
In 2009, an abridged version of Lust, Caution was read by Greg Wise as part of a series of online Jackanory style online films for The Carte Noire Readers.[2]
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ Robert Wilonsky, http://www.citypages.com/2007-10-03/movies/the-spy-who-shagged-yee accessed: 6 December 2009.
2.Jump up ^ MSN Entertainment
Stub icon This Asian American–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Stub icon This article about a World War II novel is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Stub icon This article about a historical novel of the 1970s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Categories: 1979 novels
Asian-American novels
Chinese historical novels
Novellas
Chinese novels adapted into films
Novels by Eileen Chang
World War II novels
Asian American stubs
World War II novel stubs
1970s historical novel stubs
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lust,_Caution
Lust, Caution
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
For the 2007 film adaptation by Ang Lee, see Lust, Caution (film).
Lust, Caution
Author
Eileen Chang
Translator
Julia Lovell
Lust, Caution (Chinese: 色,戒; pinyin: Sè, Jiè) is a novella by the Chinese writer Eileen Chang, first published in 1979. It is set in Shanghai, Republic of China during World War II. Reportedly, the short story "took Chang more than two decades to complete".[1]
Contents [hide]
1 Plot summary
2 Characters
3 English translations
4 Adaptations
5 References
Plot summary[edit]
In China, during the Japanese occupation in World War II, a young student and former actress named Wong Chia Chi has agreed to be the central figure in the assassination of a Japanese collaborator, Yee. Using the alias of Mak Tai Tai (Mrs. Mak) and the fictional Mr. Mak, Chia Chi befriends Mr. Yee's wife, Yee Tai Tai, and eventually seduces her husband in order to kill him. However, she falls in love with him and just before her comrades try to kill him, she warns him. He escapes and has the whole group executed, including Wong Chia Chi.
Characters[edit]
Wang Chia Chi aka Mak Tai Tai
Mr. Yee
Yee Tai Tai
Mr. Maki
Kuang Yu Min
Wu
Liang Jun Sheng
English translations[edit]
Lust, Caution was not published in English until 2007.
1.Lust, Caution (色,戒). Translated by Julia Lovell. New York: Anchor Books, 2007. ISBN 978-0-307-38744-8.
2.Lust, Caution: The Story, the Screenplay, and the Making of the Film. Translated by Julia Lovell. New York: Pantheon Books, 2007. ISBN 978-0-375-42524-0.
Adaptations[edit]
For the 2007 film by Ang Lee, see Lust, Caution (film).
In 2009, an abridged version of Lust, Caution was read by Greg Wise as part of a series of online Jackanory style online films for The Carte Noire Readers.[2]
References[edit]
1.Jump up ^ Robert Wilonsky, http://www.citypages.com/2007-10-03/movies/the-spy-who-shagged-yee accessed: 6 December 2009.
2.Jump up ^ MSN Entertainment
Stub icon This Asian American–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Stub icon This article about a World War II novel is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Stub icon This article about a historical novel of the 1970s is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.
Categories: 1979 novels
Asian-American novels
Chinese historical novels
Novellas
Chinese novels adapted into films
Novels by Eileen Chang
World War II novels
Asian American stubs
World War II novel stubs
1970s historical novel stubs
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This page was last modified on 24 February 2015, at 20:29.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lust,_Caution
Lust, Caution (film)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Lust, Caution
Lust caution.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Traditional
色,戒
Simplified
色,戒
Mandarin
Sè, Jiè
Cantonese
sik1, gaai3
Hokkien
set, kai
Directed by
Ang Lee
Produced by
Ang Lee
William Kong
James Schamus
Screenplay by
Hui-Ling Wang
James Schamus
Based on
Lust, Caution
by Eileen Chang
Starring
Tony Leung Chiu-Wai
Tang Wei
Joan Chen
Wang Leehom
Music by
Alexandre Desplat
Cinematography
Rodrigo Prieto
Edited by
Tim Squyres
Production
company
River Road Entertainment
Haishang Films
Sil-Metropole Organisation
Distributed by
Focus Features
Release dates
August 30, 2007 (Venice)
September 24, 2007 (Taiwan)
September 26, 2007 (Hong Kong)
September 28, 2007 (United States)
November 1, 2007 (China)
Running time
158 minutes[1]
Country
United States
China
Taiwan
Language
Mandarin[1]
Budget
$15 million[2]
Box office
$67,091,915[2]
Lust, Caution is a 2007 espionage erotic thriller film directed by Ang Lee, based on the novella of the same name published in 1979 by Chinese author Eileen Chang. The story is mostly set in Hong Kong in 1938 and in Shanghai in 1942, when it was occupied by the Imperial Japanese Army and ruled by the puppet government led by Wang Jingwei. It depicts a group of Chinese university students from the Lingnan University who plot to assassinate a high-ranking special agent and recruiter of the puppet government using an attractive young woman to lure him into a trap.
With this film, Lee won the Golden Lion Award at the Venice Film Festival for the second time, the first being with Brokeback Mountain.[3] The film adaptation and the story are loosely based on events that took place during the Japanese occupation of Shanghai. The film's explicit sex scenes resulted in the film being rated NC-17 in the United States.
Contents [hide]
1 Plot
2 Cast
3 Release
4 Accolades
5 Controversies 5.1 Censorship
5.2 Country of production
5.3 Defamation
6 Critical reception 6.1 Anachronisms
7 Box office
8 Home media
9 See also
10 References
11 External links
Plot[edit]
This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. Please help improve it by removing unnecessary details and making it more concise. (January 2013)
In 1940s Japanese-occupied Shanghai, a well-dressed, attractive young Chinese woman, "Mrs. Mai", is sitting in a café in a posh neighborhood. When she makes a call to a man, her seemingly innocuous dialogue is a coded signal that prompts a cell of young resistance agents to load their weapons and spring into action.
Hong Kong 1938
The film then flashes back in time to the events in 1938 that led up to the transformation of the shy, inexperienced university student Wong Chia Chi into the glamorously dressed and seemingly well-to-do Mrs. Mai, her cover role in the Chinese resistance against Japanese invasion. During the Second Sino-Japanese War, Chia Chi had been left behind in China by her father, who left to re-marry in the United Kingdom. Chia Chi flees from Shanghai to Hong Kong and attends her first year at Lingnan University. A male student, Kuang Yu Min (Wang Leehom), invites her to join his patriotic drama club. Chia Chi becomes a lead actress in the club, inspiring both her audience and her new-found friend Kuang.
Fired up from the drama troupe's patriotic plays, Kuang urges the group to make a more concrete contribution to the war against Japan. He devises a plan to assassinate Mr. Yee, who is a special agent and recruiter of the puppet government set up by the Japanese Government in China. The beautiful Chia Chi is chosen to take on the undercover role of Mrs Mai, the elegant wife of the owner of a Hong Kong based trading company. She manages to insert herself in the social circle of Mrs. Yee. Chia Chi catches the eye of Mr. Yee and tries to lure him into a location where he can be assassinated. Yee is attracted to Chia Chi and once comes very close to the trap but withdraws at the last minute. It comes to light that Chia Chi is still a virgin, and she reluctantly consents to sleeping with Liang Jun-Sheng, another student involved in the plot to kill Mr. Yee, in order to practice her role as a married woman if she were to sleep with Mr. Yee. It is obvious that Kuang has feelings for Chia Chi and is upset by this arrangement, but nevertheless agrees to the two "practicing" every following night. Not long after, Mr. and Mrs. Yee suddenly move back to Shanghai, leaving the students with no further chance to complete their assassination plan. With Yee gone, the university students believe there is no need to maintain the facade and pack up and clean up the rented apartment. An armed subordinate of Yee turns up in their apartment unannounced and finds their sudden packing very suspicious. Spotting their university tank tops, the subordinate realises that "Mr. & Mrs. Mai" are not who they claim they are. The university students kill the subordinate after a violent struggle and are forced to go into hiding afterward.
Shanghai, 1942
In Shanghai, three years later, Chia Chi again encounters Kuang, who is now an undercover agent of the KMT, which is seeking to overturn the Japanese occupation force and their puppet government. He enlists her into a renewed assassination plan to kill Yee. By this time, Mr. Yee has become the head of the secret police department under the puppet government and is responsible for capturing and executing resistance agents who are working for the KMT. Eventually, Chia Chi becomes Mr. Yee's mistress. During their first encounter, Yee has very rough sex with Chia Chi, throwing her down onto the bed and tying her up with his belt. However, over the weeks that follow their sexual relationship becomes very passionate and deeply emotional, but also very conflicted for both of them, especially for Chia Chi, who is setting her lover up for assassination.
When Chia Chi reports to her superior officer in the KMT, she exhorts him to carry out the assassination soon, so that she will not have to continue her sexual liaisons with the brutal Yee, but the officer argues that the assassination needs to be delayed for strategic reasons. Chia Chi describes the inhuman emotional conflict she is in, on one hand sexually and emotionally bound to Mr. Yee and on the other hand part of a plot to kill him.
When Mr. Yee sends Chia Chi to a jewellery store with a sealed envelope, she is surprised to discover that he has arranged for a large and extremely rare six carat pink diamond for her, to be mounted in a ring. This provides the Chinese resistance with a chance to get at Mr. Yee when he is not accompanied by his bodyguards.
The next time Chia Chi and Mr. Yee meet, she asks him to go to the jewellery store with her to collect the diamond ring. As they enter the shop, she notices several resistance agents waiting to spring the trap. After first demurring, when she puts on the magnificent ring, and experiences Mr. Yee's love for her, she is overcome by emotion and breaks down and urges him to "Go, now." Mr. Yee realises her meaning, runs out of the shop and is rushed away by his driver, and escapes the assassination attempt. By the end of the day, most of the resistance group including Kuang and Chia Chi herself are captured. It is revealed that Mr. Yee's deputy has been aware of the resistance cell, but did not inform Mr. Yee, both because of Mr. Yee's relationship with Chia Chi and because the deputy had hoped to use this opportunity to catch the resistance cell leader. Mr. Yee, emotionally in turmoil, signs their death warrants and the resistance group members, including Chia Chi, are led out to a quarry and executed. In the last scene, Mr. Yee sits on Chia Chi's empty bed in the family guest room, and informs his wife that their house guest is gone, and that she should not ask any questions.
Cast[edit]
Tang Wei as Wong Chia-chi/Mrs. Mai (C: 王佳芝, P: Wáng Jiāzhī/C: 麥太太, P: Mài-tàitai)
Tony Leung Chiu-Wai as Mr. Yee (C: 易先生, P: Yì-xiānsheng)
Joan Chen as Mrs. Yee (C: 易太太, P: Yì-tàitai)
Wang Leehom as Kuang Yumin (T: 鄺裕民, S: 邝裕民, P: Kuàng Yùmín)
Tou Chung-Hua (T: 庹宗華, C: 庹宗华, P: Tuǒ Zōnghuá) as Old Wu
Chin Kar-lok as Assistant Officer Tsao
Chu Chih-Ying (T: 朱芷瑩, S: 朱芷莹, P: Zhū Zhǐyíng) as Lai Xiujin (T: 賴秀金, S: 赖秀金, P: Lài Xiùjīn)
Kao Ying-hsuan (T: 高英軒, S: 高英轩, P: Gāo Yīngxuān) as Huang Lei (T: 黃 磊, S: 黄 磊, P: Huáng Lěi)
Lawrence Ko (T: 柯宇綸, S: 柯宇綸, P: Kē Yǔlún) as Liang Junsheng (T: 梁潤生, S: 梁润生, P: Liáng Rùnshēng)
Johnson Yuen (T: 阮德鏘, S: 阮德锵, P: Ruǎn Déqiāng) as Auyang Lingwen/Mr. Mak (T: 歐陽靈文, S: 欧阳灵文, P: Ōuyáng Língwén/C: 麥先生, P: Mài-xiānsheng)
Fan Kuang-Yao (C: 樊光耀, P: Fán Guāngyào) as Secretary Chang
Anupam Kher as Hali Salahuddin
Shyam Pathak as Jewellery shopkeeper
Akiko Takeshita (竹下 明子 Takeshita Ayako) as Japanese Tavern Boss Lady
Hayato Fujiki as Japanese Colonel Sato
Release[edit]
The film premiered at the Venice Film Festival, where it won the Golden Lion, the second such award for Ang Lee. It was released in U.S. theaters on September 28, 2007, where it was rated NC-17 by the Motion Picture Association of America due to some explicit sex scenes. Lee stated that he would make no changes to attempt to get an R rating.[4] After the movie's premiere, director Ang Lee was displeased that Chinese news media (including those from Taiwan) had greatly emphasized the sex scenes in the movie.[5] The version released in the People's Republic of China was cut by about seven minutes (by the director himself) to make it suitable for younger audiences, since China has no rating system.[6] The version released in Malaysia was approved by the Film Censorship Board of Malaysia without alterations and was rated 18SX—those under 18 are barred from the cinema. His earlier film Brokeback Mountain is banned in Malaysia. It was released on DVD in 2008 with an R-rating since rental outlets and stores do not carry NC-17 titles.
Accolades[edit]
Won: 2007 Golden Lion International Venice Film Festival Award
The film swept the 2007 Golden Horse Awards, winning seven including Best Actor, Best Feature Film and Best Director.
44th Golden Horse Awards[7]
Won: Best Film
Won: Best Director (Ang Lee)
Won: Best Actor (Tony Leung Chiu-Wai)
Won: Best New Performer (Tang Wei)
Won: Best Adapted Screenplay (Hui-Ling Wang and James Schamus)
Won: Best Makeup & Costume Design (Pan Lai)
Won: Best Original Film Score (Alexandre Desplat)
Outstanding Taiwanese Filmmaker of the Year (Ang Lee)
Nominated: Best Actress (Tang Wei)
Nominated: Best Art Direction (Lau Sai-Wan, Pan Lai)
Nominated: Best Cinematography (Rodrigo Prieto)
Nominated: Best Editing (Tim Squyres)
27th Hong Kong Film Awards
Won: Best Asian Film (Ang Lee)
65th Golden Globe Awards
Nominated: Best Foreign Film
61st British Academy Film Awards
Nominated: Best Costume Design (Pan Lai)
Nominated: Best Foreign Film (Ang Lee, James Schamus, William Kong)
Nominated: Rising Star Award (Tang Wei)
2nd Asian Film Awards
Won: Best Actor (Tony Leung Chiu-Wai)
Nominated: Best Film
Nominated: Best Actress (Tang Wei)
Nominated: Best Composer (Alexandre Desplat)
Nominated: Best Director (Ang Lee)
Nominated: Best Screenwriter (Wang Hui-Ling and James Schamus)
The film was nominated for the Best Film in a Foreign Language BAFTA in 2008.
Ang Lee was awarded Freedom of Expression award at the ShoWest convention for his decision to release the film in the United States uncut, rather than editing the film to avoid the MPAA's NC-17 rating.[8]
Controversies[edit]
Censorship[edit]
This section may be confusing or unclear to readers. (April 2009)
In its uncut form, Lust, Caution features three episodes of graphic sex, with full-frontal nudity. The ten minutes of sex scenes were considered by Lee to be critical to the story and reportedly took 100 hours to shoot.[9]
In a number of countries, notably the People's Republic of China and India, many of the sex scenes had to be cut before the film could be released. In Singapore, while the film's producers initially decided to release a cut version there which was given an NC-16 rating, a public outcry stating that the producers of the film were underestimating censorship standards in the country (the film was released uncut in Hong Kong and Taiwan) prompted them to eventually release the uncut version with the higher R21 rating in Singapore. The film is rated R18 and was released uncut in New Zealand.[10]
The following scenes were cut from the mainland China version:
1.Wong Chia Chi walking past dead refugees in the street
2.Stabbing scene cut to only one knife stab
3.Two of the sex scenes featuring the student, and three featuring Mr. Yee
4.A nude shot of Wong Chia Chi at window
5.Wong Chia Chi in bed after first sex scene with Mr. Yee
6.Dialogue modified in diamond ring scene so that Wong Chia Chi did not betray the resistance by warning Mr. Yee.[11]
The film's end credits ends with a 18 U.S.C § 2257 notice.[12]
Country of production[edit]
The film was co-produced by the American companies Focus Features and River Road Productions, and Chinese companies Shanghai Film Group Corporation and Haishang Films and the Taiwanese Hai Sheng Film Production Company. The director is Ang Lee, who is a naturalized U.S. citizen, and the actors/actresses are from mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan as well as the United States. It was shot in Shanghai, the neighboring province of Zhejiang, Hong Kong (at Hong Kong University), and some locations in Penang and Ipoh in Malaysia used as 1930s/1940s Hong Kong.
Originally, the film's country was identified as "China-USA" by the organizers of the Venice Film Festival. However, a few days later, the Venice Film Festival changed the film to "USA-China-Taiwan, China" on its official schedule.[13] When the film premiered at the event, Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council protested the Venice event's use of "Taiwan, China" to identify films from the island and blamed China for the move.[14][15]
After the film's premiere, Taiwan submitted the film as its Best Foreign Film Oscar entry. However, the Oscars asked Taiwan to withdraw the film because some key crew members were not locals. Oscars spokeswoman Teni Melidonian said in an e-mail organizers refused to accept the film because "an insufficient number of Taiwanese participated in the production of the film," violating a rule that requires foreign countries to certify their locals "exercised artistic control" over their submission.
Defamation[edit]
On September 13, 2007, an elderly lady, Zheng Tianru, staged a press conference in Los Angeles, claiming that the movie was about real-life events that happened in World War II, and wrongfully portrayed her older sister, Zheng Pingru, as a promiscuous secret agent who seduced and eventually fell in love with the assassination target Ding Mocun (she alleges that the characters were renamed to Wang Jiazhi and Mr. Yee in the movie).[16] Taiwan's investigation bureau confirmed that Zheng Pingru failed to kill Ding Mocun because her gun jammed, rather than developing a romantic relationship with the assassin's target.[citation needed] Director Ang Lee maintains that Eileen Chang wrote the original short story as fiction.[17]
Critical reception[edit]
As of March 31, 2011, on the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, 72% of critics gave the film positive reviews, the consensus said "Ang Lee's Lust, Caution is a tense, sensual and beautifully-shot espionage film".[18] On Metacritic, the film had an average score of 61 out of 100, based on 34 reviews.[19]
Jack Mathews of the New York Daily News named it the 5th best film of 2007.[20] Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times named it the 6th best film of 2007.[20]
The Chinese press gave generally positive reviews. In analyzing how successful Lee's film was as an adaptation of Eileen Chang's short story, literary critic Leo Lee Ou-fan (李歐梵) wrote in Muse Magazine that he 'found [his] loyalties divided between Eileen Chang and Ang Lee. But after three viewings of the film, I have finally opted for Lee because deep down I believe in film magic which can sometimes displace textual fidelity.'[21] In an earlier issue of Muse however, film critic Perry Lam had criticized Lee's direction: 'in his eagerness to make the movie appealing to a mass audience, Lee seems guilty of sentimentalism.'[22] Sentimental or not, there is certainly a palpable trace of Lee's sympathy for Chang's personal love life, “It was hard for me to live in Eileen Chang’s world...There are days I hated her for it. It’s so sad, so tragic. But you realize there’s a shortage of love in her life: romantic love, family love.” He added, “This is the story of what killed love for her.”[23]
Anachronisms[edit]
It has been noted by critics (including Bryan Appleyard[24]) that the Hong Kong sequences in the film set in the late 1930s[25] include "London taxis" of two types (FX3, FX4) that were only manufactured onwards from 1948 and 1958 respectively.[26]
Box office[edit]
Lust, Caution was produced on a budget of approximately $15 million.[27]
In Hong Kong, where it played in its entirety, Lust, Caution grossed US$6,249,342 (approximately $48 million HKD) despite being saddled with a restrictive "Category III" rating. It was the territory's biggest-grossing Chinese language film of the year, and third biggest overall (behind only Spider-Man 3 and Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix).[28]
The film was also a huge success in China, despite playing only in a heavily edited version. It grossed US$17,109,185, making it the country's sixth highest-grossing film of 2007 and third highest-grossing domestic production.[29]
In North America, the NC-17 rating which Lust, Caution received is traditionally perceived as a box office "kiss-of-death". In its opening weekend in one U.S. theatre, it grossed $63,918.[27] Expanding to seventeen venues the next week, its per-screen average was $21,341, before cooling down to $4,639 at 125 screens.[30] Never playing at more than 143 theatres in its entire U.S. run, it eventually grossed $4,604,982.[30] As of August 15, 2008, it was the fifth highest-grossing NC-17 production in North America.[31] Focus Features was very satisfied with the United States release of this film.[32]
Worldwide, Lust, Caution grossed $67,091,915.[27]
Home media[edit]
In the United States, two DVD versions of this film were released: the original NC-17 version and the censored R-rated version.[33]
This film has generated more than $24 million from its DVD sales and rentals in the United States,[27][34] an impressive result for a film that only grossed $4.6 million in limited theatrical release in the United States.[27]
See also[edit]
United States film.svgFilm in the United States portal
China.svgChina portal
Hong Kong SAR Regional Emblem.svgHong Kong portal
Taiwan-icon.svgTaiwan portal
Blue iPod Nano.jpg2000s portal
References[edit]
1.^ Jump up to: a b "LUST, CAUTION (18)". British Board of Film Classification. 2007-10-11. Retrieved 2012-12-02.
2.^ Jump up to: a b Lust, Caution at Box Office Mojo
3.Jump up ^ The awards of the Venice Film Festival on the Festival's site
4.Jump up ^ Goldstein, Gregg (August 24, 2007). "Focus won't sweat NC-17 for 'Lust'". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 9, 2007.[dead link]
5.Jump up ^ 媒體猛炒性愛 李安痛心 (in Chinese). Retrieved August 16, 2008.
6.Jump up ^ "Ang Lee celebrates golden success of "Lust, Caution"". CNN. December 21, 2007.
7.Jump up ^ "Lee film sweeps Taiwan 'Oscars'". BBC News. 8 December 2007. Retrieved 25 November 2012.
8.Jump up ^ Bowles, Scott. "'Lust, Caution': Not just a movie title in NC-17 debate", USA Today, March 13, 2008
9.Jump up ^ "'Fang' Lee: cruel but true". The Age (Melbourne, Australia). January 11, 2008.
10.Jump up ^ http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=10488493
11.Jump up ^ Lee admits 'political edit' of film
12.Jump up ^ The notice reads: "18 U.S.C § 2257 records custodian – Joyce Hsieh, custodian of records, Mr. Yee Productions LLC, C/O Schreck Rose Dapello Adams & Hurwitz LLP, 1790 Broadway, New York, NY 10019. Date of publication: September 28, 2007.
The performers in this motion picture who are depicted engaging in sexually explicit conduct, and the characters that they portray therein, were all over 18 years of age at the time of photography. The content is inappropriate for minors and appropriate care should be taken to ensure that it is not viewed by anyone under 18 years of age. The records required by 18 U.S.C § 2257 and associated regulations with respect to the motion picture on which this notice appears are kept by the custodian of the records at the office of the manufacturer above."
13.Jump up ^ "64th Venice Film Festival – In Competition". Retrieved September 9, 2007.
14.Jump up ^ "Taiwan protests Chinese credit for Ang Lee's movie at Venice festival". Retrieved September 9, 2007.[dead link]
15.Jump up ^ "Venice Film Fest faces faux pas over Taiwan". CBC News. August 28, 2007. Retrieved February 9, 2008.
16.Jump up ^ 色‧戒」影射鄭蘋如?鄭家人不滿 (in Chinese). Retrieved August 16, 2008.
17.Jump up ^ "湯唯情欲戲被指褻瀆烈士 <色戒>遭原型家人聲討" (in Chinese). Retrieved August 16, 2008.
18.Jump up ^ "Lust, Caution – Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved March 31, 2011.
19.Jump up ^ "Lust, Caution (2007): Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved October 30, 2007.
20.^ Jump up to: a b "Metacritic: 2007 Film Critic Top Ten Lists". Metacritic. Archived from the original on January 2, 2008. Retrieved January 8, 2008.
21.Jump up ^ Lee, Leo Ou-fan (November 2007). "Lust, Caution: Vision and revision". Muse Magazine (10): 96.
22.Jump up ^ Lam, Perry (October 2007). "Great expectations". Muse Magazine (9): 103.
23.Jump up ^ Lim, Dennis (August 26, 2007). "Love as an Illusion: Beautiful to See, Impossible to Hold". The New York Times.
24.Jump up ^ Appleyard, Bryan (January 21, 2008). "A Protocol Problem and the Lust Caution Taxi". Thought Experiments: The Blog. brianappleyard.com. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
25.Jump up ^ See Lust, Caution (clip) (WMV) (Motion picture). Focus Features. Retrieved August 16, 2008. (5.2 MB)
26.Jump up ^ "The FX series". LTI Vehicles. 2006. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
27.^ Jump up to: a b c d e "Lust, Caution". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved December 5, 2010.
28.Jump up ^ "Hong Kong Yearly Box Office (2007)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
29.Jump up ^ "China Yearly Box Office (2007)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
30.^ Jump up to: a b "Lust, Caution – Weekend Box Office". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
31.Jump up ^ "Domestic Grosses by MPAA Rating – NC-17". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
32.Jump up ^ Sperling, Nicole (March 19, 2008). "Ang Lee and James Schamus Get Frank". Entertainment Weekly.
33.Jump up ^ Foster, Dave (December 30, 2007). "Lust, Caution (R1) in February – Artwork Updated". DVD Times. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
34.Jump up ^ Hendrix, Grady (April 23, 2008). "Dirty DVD sales". Kaiju Shakedown blog. Variety Asia. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
External links[edit]
Official website
Lust, Caution at the Internet Movie Database
Lust, Caution at AllMovie
Lust, Caution at Box Office Mojo
Lust, Caution at Rotten Tomatoes
Lust, Caution at Metacritic
Proceeding with Caution
Kamiyama, Masuo (February 20, 2008). "Steamy Shanghai period flick's feisty performers show plenty of lust, not much caution". Mainichi Shimbun. Archived from the original on February 23, 2008. Retrieved February 20, 2008.
Lust, Caution Reviews – spcnet.tv
Ang Lee on making Lust, Caution
Awards
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After This Our Exile Golden Horse Awards for Best Film
2007 Succeeded by
The Warlords
Preceded by
Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles Hong Kong Film Awards for Best Asian Film
2007 Succeeded by
Assembly
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lust,_Caution_(film)
Lust, Caution (film)
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Lust, Caution
Lust caution.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Traditional
色,戒
Simplified
色,戒
Mandarin
Sè, Jiè
Cantonese
sik1, gaai3
Hokkien
set, kai
Directed by
Ang Lee
Produced by
Ang Lee
William Kong
James Schamus
Screenplay by
Hui-Ling Wang
James Schamus
Based on
Lust, Caution
by Eileen Chang
Starring
Tony Leung Chiu-Wai
Tang Wei
Joan Chen
Wang Leehom
Music by
Alexandre Desplat
Cinematography
Rodrigo Prieto
Edited by
Tim Squyres
Production
company
River Road Entertainment
Haishang Films
Sil-Metropole Organisation
Distributed by
Focus Features
Release dates
August 30, 2007 (Venice)
September 24, 2007 (Taiwan)
September 26, 2007 (Hong Kong)
September 28, 2007 (United States)
November 1, 2007 (China)
Running time
158 minutes[1]
Country
United States
China
Taiwan
Language
Mandarin[1]
Budget
$15 million[2]
Box office
$67,091,915[2]
Lust, Caution is a 2007 espionage erotic thriller film directed by Ang Lee, based on the novella of the same name published in 1979 by Chinese author Eileen Chang. The story is mostly set in Hong Kong in 1938 and in Shanghai in 1942, when it was occupied by the Imperial Japanese Army and ruled by the puppet government led by Wang Jingwei. It depicts a group of Chinese university students from the Lingnan University who plot to assassinate a high-ranking special agent and recruiter of the puppet government using an attractive young woman to lure him into a trap.
With this film, Lee won the Golden Lion Award at the Venice Film Festival for the second time, the first being with Brokeback Mountain.[3] The film adaptation and the story are loosely based on events that took place during the Japanese occupation of Shanghai. The film's explicit sex scenes resulted in the film being rated NC-17 in the United States.
Contents [hide]
1 Plot
2 Cast
3 Release
4 Accolades
5 Controversies 5.1 Censorship
5.2 Country of production
5.3 Defamation
6 Critical reception 6.1 Anachronisms
7 Box office
8 Home media
9 See also
10 References
11 External links
Plot[edit]
This article's plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed. Please help improve it by removing unnecessary details and making it more concise. (January 2013)
In 1940s Japanese-occupied Shanghai, a well-dressed, attractive young Chinese woman, "Mrs. Mai", is sitting in a café in a posh neighborhood. When she makes a call to a man, her seemingly innocuous dialogue is a coded signal that prompts a cell of young resistance agents to load their weapons and spring into action.
Hong Kong 1938
The film then flashes back in time to the events in 1938 that led up to the transformation of the shy, inexperienced university student Wong Chia Chi into the glamorously dressed and seemingly well-to-do Mrs. Mai, her cover role in the Chinese resistance against Japanese invasion. During the Second Sino-Japanese War, Chia Chi had been left behind in China by her father, who left to re-marry in the United Kingdom. Chia Chi flees from Shanghai to Hong Kong and attends her first year at Lingnan University. A male student, Kuang Yu Min (Wang Leehom), invites her to join his patriotic drama club. Chia Chi becomes a lead actress in the club, inspiring both her audience and her new-found friend Kuang.
Fired up from the drama troupe's patriotic plays, Kuang urges the group to make a more concrete contribution to the war against Japan. He devises a plan to assassinate Mr. Yee, who is a special agent and recruiter of the puppet government set up by the Japanese Government in China. The beautiful Chia Chi is chosen to take on the undercover role of Mrs Mai, the elegant wife of the owner of a Hong Kong based trading company. She manages to insert herself in the social circle of Mrs. Yee. Chia Chi catches the eye of Mr. Yee and tries to lure him into a location where he can be assassinated. Yee is attracted to Chia Chi and once comes very close to the trap but withdraws at the last minute. It comes to light that Chia Chi is still a virgin, and she reluctantly consents to sleeping with Liang Jun-Sheng, another student involved in the plot to kill Mr. Yee, in order to practice her role as a married woman if she were to sleep with Mr. Yee. It is obvious that Kuang has feelings for Chia Chi and is upset by this arrangement, but nevertheless agrees to the two "practicing" every following night. Not long after, Mr. and Mrs. Yee suddenly move back to Shanghai, leaving the students with no further chance to complete their assassination plan. With Yee gone, the university students believe there is no need to maintain the facade and pack up and clean up the rented apartment. An armed subordinate of Yee turns up in their apartment unannounced and finds their sudden packing very suspicious. Spotting their university tank tops, the subordinate realises that "Mr. & Mrs. Mai" are not who they claim they are. The university students kill the subordinate after a violent struggle and are forced to go into hiding afterward.
Shanghai, 1942
In Shanghai, three years later, Chia Chi again encounters Kuang, who is now an undercover agent of the KMT, which is seeking to overturn the Japanese occupation force and their puppet government. He enlists her into a renewed assassination plan to kill Yee. By this time, Mr. Yee has become the head of the secret police department under the puppet government and is responsible for capturing and executing resistance agents who are working for the KMT. Eventually, Chia Chi becomes Mr. Yee's mistress. During their first encounter, Yee has very rough sex with Chia Chi, throwing her down onto the bed and tying her up with his belt. However, over the weeks that follow their sexual relationship becomes very passionate and deeply emotional, but also very conflicted for both of them, especially for Chia Chi, who is setting her lover up for assassination.
When Chia Chi reports to her superior officer in the KMT, she exhorts him to carry out the assassination soon, so that she will not have to continue her sexual liaisons with the brutal Yee, but the officer argues that the assassination needs to be delayed for strategic reasons. Chia Chi describes the inhuman emotional conflict she is in, on one hand sexually and emotionally bound to Mr. Yee and on the other hand part of a plot to kill him.
When Mr. Yee sends Chia Chi to a jewellery store with a sealed envelope, she is surprised to discover that he has arranged for a large and extremely rare six carat pink diamond for her, to be mounted in a ring. This provides the Chinese resistance with a chance to get at Mr. Yee when he is not accompanied by his bodyguards.
The next time Chia Chi and Mr. Yee meet, she asks him to go to the jewellery store with her to collect the diamond ring. As they enter the shop, she notices several resistance agents waiting to spring the trap. After first demurring, when she puts on the magnificent ring, and experiences Mr. Yee's love for her, she is overcome by emotion and breaks down and urges him to "Go, now." Mr. Yee realises her meaning, runs out of the shop and is rushed away by his driver, and escapes the assassination attempt. By the end of the day, most of the resistance group including Kuang and Chia Chi herself are captured. It is revealed that Mr. Yee's deputy has been aware of the resistance cell, but did not inform Mr. Yee, both because of Mr. Yee's relationship with Chia Chi and because the deputy had hoped to use this opportunity to catch the resistance cell leader. Mr. Yee, emotionally in turmoil, signs their death warrants and the resistance group members, including Chia Chi, are led out to a quarry and executed. In the last scene, Mr. Yee sits on Chia Chi's empty bed in the family guest room, and informs his wife that their house guest is gone, and that she should not ask any questions.
Cast[edit]
Tang Wei as Wong Chia-chi/Mrs. Mai (C: 王佳芝, P: Wáng Jiāzhī/C: 麥太太, P: Mài-tàitai)
Tony Leung Chiu-Wai as Mr. Yee (C: 易先生, P: Yì-xiānsheng)
Joan Chen as Mrs. Yee (C: 易太太, P: Yì-tàitai)
Wang Leehom as Kuang Yumin (T: 鄺裕民, S: 邝裕民, P: Kuàng Yùmín)
Tou Chung-Hua (T: 庹宗華, C: 庹宗华, P: Tuǒ Zōnghuá) as Old Wu
Chin Kar-lok as Assistant Officer Tsao
Chu Chih-Ying (T: 朱芷瑩, S: 朱芷莹, P: Zhū Zhǐyíng) as Lai Xiujin (T: 賴秀金, S: 赖秀金, P: Lài Xiùjīn)
Kao Ying-hsuan (T: 高英軒, S: 高英轩, P: Gāo Yīngxuān) as Huang Lei (T: 黃 磊, S: 黄 磊, P: Huáng Lěi)
Lawrence Ko (T: 柯宇綸, S: 柯宇綸, P: Kē Yǔlún) as Liang Junsheng (T: 梁潤生, S: 梁润生, P: Liáng Rùnshēng)
Johnson Yuen (T: 阮德鏘, S: 阮德锵, P: Ruǎn Déqiāng) as Auyang Lingwen/Mr. Mak (T: 歐陽靈文, S: 欧阳灵文, P: Ōuyáng Língwén/C: 麥先生, P: Mài-xiānsheng)
Fan Kuang-Yao (C: 樊光耀, P: Fán Guāngyào) as Secretary Chang
Anupam Kher as Hali Salahuddin
Shyam Pathak as Jewellery shopkeeper
Akiko Takeshita (竹下 明子 Takeshita Ayako) as Japanese Tavern Boss Lady
Hayato Fujiki as Japanese Colonel Sato
Release[edit]
The film premiered at the Venice Film Festival, where it won the Golden Lion, the second such award for Ang Lee. It was released in U.S. theaters on September 28, 2007, where it was rated NC-17 by the Motion Picture Association of America due to some explicit sex scenes. Lee stated that he would make no changes to attempt to get an R rating.[4] After the movie's premiere, director Ang Lee was displeased that Chinese news media (including those from Taiwan) had greatly emphasized the sex scenes in the movie.[5] The version released in the People's Republic of China was cut by about seven minutes (by the director himself) to make it suitable for younger audiences, since China has no rating system.[6] The version released in Malaysia was approved by the Film Censorship Board of Malaysia without alterations and was rated 18SX—those under 18 are barred from the cinema. His earlier film Brokeback Mountain is banned in Malaysia. It was released on DVD in 2008 with an R-rating since rental outlets and stores do not carry NC-17 titles.
Accolades[edit]
Won: 2007 Golden Lion International Venice Film Festival Award
The film swept the 2007 Golden Horse Awards, winning seven including Best Actor, Best Feature Film and Best Director.
44th Golden Horse Awards[7]
Won: Best Film
Won: Best Director (Ang Lee)
Won: Best Actor (Tony Leung Chiu-Wai)
Won: Best New Performer (Tang Wei)
Won: Best Adapted Screenplay (Hui-Ling Wang and James Schamus)
Won: Best Makeup & Costume Design (Pan Lai)
Won: Best Original Film Score (Alexandre Desplat)
Outstanding Taiwanese Filmmaker of the Year (Ang Lee)
Nominated: Best Actress (Tang Wei)
Nominated: Best Art Direction (Lau Sai-Wan, Pan Lai)
Nominated: Best Cinematography (Rodrigo Prieto)
Nominated: Best Editing (Tim Squyres)
27th Hong Kong Film Awards
Won: Best Asian Film (Ang Lee)
65th Golden Globe Awards
Nominated: Best Foreign Film
61st British Academy Film Awards
Nominated: Best Costume Design (Pan Lai)
Nominated: Best Foreign Film (Ang Lee, James Schamus, William Kong)
Nominated: Rising Star Award (Tang Wei)
2nd Asian Film Awards
Won: Best Actor (Tony Leung Chiu-Wai)
Nominated: Best Film
Nominated: Best Actress (Tang Wei)
Nominated: Best Composer (Alexandre Desplat)
Nominated: Best Director (Ang Lee)
Nominated: Best Screenwriter (Wang Hui-Ling and James Schamus)
The film was nominated for the Best Film in a Foreign Language BAFTA in 2008.
Ang Lee was awarded Freedom of Expression award at the ShoWest convention for his decision to release the film in the United States uncut, rather than editing the film to avoid the MPAA's NC-17 rating.[8]
Controversies[edit]
Censorship[edit]
This section may be confusing or unclear to readers. (April 2009)
In its uncut form, Lust, Caution features three episodes of graphic sex, with full-frontal nudity. The ten minutes of sex scenes were considered by Lee to be critical to the story and reportedly took 100 hours to shoot.[9]
In a number of countries, notably the People's Republic of China and India, many of the sex scenes had to be cut before the film could be released. In Singapore, while the film's producers initially decided to release a cut version there which was given an NC-16 rating, a public outcry stating that the producers of the film were underestimating censorship standards in the country (the film was released uncut in Hong Kong and Taiwan) prompted them to eventually release the uncut version with the higher R21 rating in Singapore. The film is rated R18 and was released uncut in New Zealand.[10]
The following scenes were cut from the mainland China version:
1.Wong Chia Chi walking past dead refugees in the street
2.Stabbing scene cut to only one knife stab
3.Two of the sex scenes featuring the student, and three featuring Mr. Yee
4.A nude shot of Wong Chia Chi at window
5.Wong Chia Chi in bed after first sex scene with Mr. Yee
6.Dialogue modified in diamond ring scene so that Wong Chia Chi did not betray the resistance by warning Mr. Yee.[11]
The film's end credits ends with a 18 U.S.C § 2257 notice.[12]
Country of production[edit]
The film was co-produced by the American companies Focus Features and River Road Productions, and Chinese companies Shanghai Film Group Corporation and Haishang Films and the Taiwanese Hai Sheng Film Production Company. The director is Ang Lee, who is a naturalized U.S. citizen, and the actors/actresses are from mainland China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan as well as the United States. It was shot in Shanghai, the neighboring province of Zhejiang, Hong Kong (at Hong Kong University), and some locations in Penang and Ipoh in Malaysia used as 1930s/1940s Hong Kong.
Originally, the film's country was identified as "China-USA" by the organizers of the Venice Film Festival. However, a few days later, the Venice Film Festival changed the film to "USA-China-Taiwan, China" on its official schedule.[13] When the film premiered at the event, Taiwan's Mainland Affairs Council protested the Venice event's use of "Taiwan, China" to identify films from the island and blamed China for the move.[14][15]
After the film's premiere, Taiwan submitted the film as its Best Foreign Film Oscar entry. However, the Oscars asked Taiwan to withdraw the film because some key crew members were not locals. Oscars spokeswoman Teni Melidonian said in an e-mail organizers refused to accept the film because "an insufficient number of Taiwanese participated in the production of the film," violating a rule that requires foreign countries to certify their locals "exercised artistic control" over their submission.
Defamation[edit]
On September 13, 2007, an elderly lady, Zheng Tianru, staged a press conference in Los Angeles, claiming that the movie was about real-life events that happened in World War II, and wrongfully portrayed her older sister, Zheng Pingru, as a promiscuous secret agent who seduced and eventually fell in love with the assassination target Ding Mocun (she alleges that the characters were renamed to Wang Jiazhi and Mr. Yee in the movie).[16] Taiwan's investigation bureau confirmed that Zheng Pingru failed to kill Ding Mocun because her gun jammed, rather than developing a romantic relationship with the assassin's target.[citation needed] Director Ang Lee maintains that Eileen Chang wrote the original short story as fiction.[17]
Critical reception[edit]
As of March 31, 2011, on the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, 72% of critics gave the film positive reviews, the consensus said "Ang Lee's Lust, Caution is a tense, sensual and beautifully-shot espionage film".[18] On Metacritic, the film had an average score of 61 out of 100, based on 34 reviews.[19]
Jack Mathews of the New York Daily News named it the 5th best film of 2007.[20] Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times named it the 6th best film of 2007.[20]
The Chinese press gave generally positive reviews. In analyzing how successful Lee's film was as an adaptation of Eileen Chang's short story, literary critic Leo Lee Ou-fan (李歐梵) wrote in Muse Magazine that he 'found [his] loyalties divided between Eileen Chang and Ang Lee. But after three viewings of the film, I have finally opted for Lee because deep down I believe in film magic which can sometimes displace textual fidelity.'[21] In an earlier issue of Muse however, film critic Perry Lam had criticized Lee's direction: 'in his eagerness to make the movie appealing to a mass audience, Lee seems guilty of sentimentalism.'[22] Sentimental or not, there is certainly a palpable trace of Lee's sympathy for Chang's personal love life, “It was hard for me to live in Eileen Chang’s world...There are days I hated her for it. It’s so sad, so tragic. But you realize there’s a shortage of love in her life: romantic love, family love.” He added, “This is the story of what killed love for her.”[23]
Anachronisms[edit]
It has been noted by critics (including Bryan Appleyard[24]) that the Hong Kong sequences in the film set in the late 1930s[25] include "London taxis" of two types (FX3, FX4) that were only manufactured onwards from 1948 and 1958 respectively.[26]
Box office[edit]
Lust, Caution was produced on a budget of approximately $15 million.[27]
In Hong Kong, where it played in its entirety, Lust, Caution grossed US$6,249,342 (approximately $48 million HKD) despite being saddled with a restrictive "Category III" rating. It was the territory's biggest-grossing Chinese language film of the year, and third biggest overall (behind only Spider-Man 3 and Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix).[28]
The film was also a huge success in China, despite playing only in a heavily edited version. It grossed US$17,109,185, making it the country's sixth highest-grossing film of 2007 and third highest-grossing domestic production.[29]
In North America, the NC-17 rating which Lust, Caution received is traditionally perceived as a box office "kiss-of-death". In its opening weekend in one U.S. theatre, it grossed $63,918.[27] Expanding to seventeen venues the next week, its per-screen average was $21,341, before cooling down to $4,639 at 125 screens.[30] Never playing at more than 143 theatres in its entire U.S. run, it eventually grossed $4,604,982.[30] As of August 15, 2008, it was the fifth highest-grossing NC-17 production in North America.[31] Focus Features was very satisfied with the United States release of this film.[32]
Worldwide, Lust, Caution grossed $67,091,915.[27]
Home media[edit]
In the United States, two DVD versions of this film were released: the original NC-17 version and the censored R-rated version.[33]
This film has generated more than $24 million from its DVD sales and rentals in the United States,[27][34] an impressive result for a film that only grossed $4.6 million in limited theatrical release in the United States.[27]
See also[edit]
United States film.svgFilm in the United States portal
China.svgChina portal
Hong Kong SAR Regional Emblem.svgHong Kong portal
Taiwan-icon.svgTaiwan portal
Blue iPod Nano.jpg2000s portal
References[edit]
1.^ Jump up to: a b "LUST, CAUTION (18)". British Board of Film Classification. 2007-10-11. Retrieved 2012-12-02.
2.^ Jump up to: a b Lust, Caution at Box Office Mojo
3.Jump up ^ The awards of the Venice Film Festival on the Festival's site
4.Jump up ^ Goldstein, Gregg (August 24, 2007). "Focus won't sweat NC-17 for 'Lust'". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 9, 2007.[dead link]
5.Jump up ^ 媒體猛炒性愛 李安痛心 (in Chinese). Retrieved August 16, 2008.
6.Jump up ^ "Ang Lee celebrates golden success of "Lust, Caution"". CNN. December 21, 2007.
7.Jump up ^ "Lee film sweeps Taiwan 'Oscars'". BBC News. 8 December 2007. Retrieved 25 November 2012.
8.Jump up ^ Bowles, Scott. "'Lust, Caution': Not just a movie title in NC-17 debate", USA Today, March 13, 2008
9.Jump up ^ "'Fang' Lee: cruel but true". The Age (Melbourne, Australia). January 11, 2008.
10.Jump up ^ http://www.nzherald.co.nz/entertainment/news/article.cfm?c_id=1501119&objectid=10488493
11.Jump up ^ Lee admits 'political edit' of film
12.Jump up ^ The notice reads: "18 U.S.C § 2257 records custodian – Joyce Hsieh, custodian of records, Mr. Yee Productions LLC, C/O Schreck Rose Dapello Adams & Hurwitz LLP, 1790 Broadway, New York, NY 10019. Date of publication: September 28, 2007.
The performers in this motion picture who are depicted engaging in sexually explicit conduct, and the characters that they portray therein, were all over 18 years of age at the time of photography. The content is inappropriate for minors and appropriate care should be taken to ensure that it is not viewed by anyone under 18 years of age. The records required by 18 U.S.C § 2257 and associated regulations with respect to the motion picture on which this notice appears are kept by the custodian of the records at the office of the manufacturer above."
13.Jump up ^ "64th Venice Film Festival – In Competition". Retrieved September 9, 2007.
14.Jump up ^ "Taiwan protests Chinese credit for Ang Lee's movie at Venice festival". Retrieved September 9, 2007.[dead link]
15.Jump up ^ "Venice Film Fest faces faux pas over Taiwan". CBC News. August 28, 2007. Retrieved February 9, 2008.
16.Jump up ^ 色‧戒」影射鄭蘋如?鄭家人不滿 (in Chinese). Retrieved August 16, 2008.
17.Jump up ^ "湯唯情欲戲被指褻瀆烈士 <色戒>遭原型家人聲討" (in Chinese). Retrieved August 16, 2008.
18.Jump up ^ "Lust, Caution – Rotten Tomatoes". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved March 31, 2011.
19.Jump up ^ "Lust, Caution (2007): Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved October 30, 2007.
20.^ Jump up to: a b "Metacritic: 2007 Film Critic Top Ten Lists". Metacritic. Archived from the original on January 2, 2008. Retrieved January 8, 2008.
21.Jump up ^ Lee, Leo Ou-fan (November 2007). "Lust, Caution: Vision and revision". Muse Magazine (10): 96.
22.Jump up ^ Lam, Perry (October 2007). "Great expectations". Muse Magazine (9): 103.
23.Jump up ^ Lim, Dennis (August 26, 2007). "Love as an Illusion: Beautiful to See, Impossible to Hold". The New York Times.
24.Jump up ^ Appleyard, Bryan (January 21, 2008). "A Protocol Problem and the Lust Caution Taxi". Thought Experiments: The Blog. brianappleyard.com. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
25.Jump up ^ See Lust, Caution (clip) (WMV) (Motion picture). Focus Features. Retrieved August 16, 2008. (5.2 MB)
26.Jump up ^ "The FX series". LTI Vehicles. 2006. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
27.^ Jump up to: a b c d e "Lust, Caution". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved December 5, 2010.
28.Jump up ^ "Hong Kong Yearly Box Office (2007)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
29.Jump up ^ "China Yearly Box Office (2007)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
30.^ Jump up to: a b "Lust, Caution – Weekend Box Office". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
31.Jump up ^ "Domestic Grosses by MPAA Rating – NC-17". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
32.Jump up ^ Sperling, Nicole (March 19, 2008). "Ang Lee and James Schamus Get Frank". Entertainment Weekly.
33.Jump up ^ Foster, Dave (December 30, 2007). "Lust, Caution (R1) in February – Artwork Updated". DVD Times. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
34.Jump up ^ Hendrix, Grady (April 23, 2008). "Dirty DVD sales". Kaiju Shakedown blog. Variety Asia. Retrieved August 16, 2008.
External links[edit]
Official website
Lust, Caution at the Internet Movie Database
Lust, Caution at AllMovie
Lust, Caution at Box Office Mojo
Lust, Caution at Rotten Tomatoes
Lust, Caution at Metacritic
Proceeding with Caution
Kamiyama, Masuo (February 20, 2008). "Steamy Shanghai period flick's feisty performers show plenty of lust, not much caution". Mainichi Shimbun. Archived from the original on February 23, 2008. Retrieved February 20, 2008.
Lust, Caution Reviews – spcnet.tv
Ang Lee on making Lust, Caution
Awards
Preceded by
After This Our Exile Golden Horse Awards for Best Film
2007 Succeeded by
The Warlords
Preceded by
Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles Hong Kong Film Awards for Best Asian Film
2007 Succeeded by
Assembly
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Films directed by Ang Lee
[show]
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Golden Lion winning films
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Golden Horse Award for Best Film
Categories: 2007 films
Best Feature Film Golden Horse Award winners
2000s thriller films
American films
American spy films
American thriller films
Cantonese-language films
Chinese films
English-language films
Erotic thriller films
Films based on short fiction
Films directed by Ang Lee
Films set in China
Films set in Hong Kong
Films set in Shanghai
Focus Features films
Hindi-language films
Japanese-language films
Leone d'Oro winners
Mandarin-language films
Second Sino-Japanese War films
Shanghainese-language films
Taiwanese films
Films whose director won the Best Director Golden Horse Award
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This page was last modified on 15 March 2015, at 00:56.
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