Won Kar-Wai, 2004, 129 minutes, UK:12A
With this film I will begin informal ad hoc extensions to the Friday Films series that started in February.
This Film will start @ 9:30pm.

Reviewers agree on at least one thing about this film. "
It's not for everyone". And yes, that it is a sequel to Won Kar-Wai's previous movie "In the mood for love". Well... also, that it may still be somehow about unrequited love.
For a flavour of the range of reactions to this film, I will cite from two reviews; one positive and one negative.
From a positive review
2046 is a masterful period piece and profoundly moving meditation on unrequited love, loss and desire. Its narrative is complex and rambling, its effect verbose and grandiose. But its combination of emotional impact and sumptuous visual artistry lift it into lofty cinematic heights.
The central character from 'in the mood for love' is reprised as a deeply jaded modern Casanova in 1960's Hong kong. Love is intricately bound to loss for him and his Hong Kong exploits serve to inflict this view upon his amorous conquests. The period detail and nuance of character and acting are exceptional. The same themes from 'in the mood for love' are blown up onto a radically large, disjointed canvas encompassing mirror narratives and a science fiction future. Is some of the effectiveness of the earlier work lost in the process? Maybe so but the artistic imagination and emotional evocation of themes make up for this.
2046 is used to stand for that which is desired and simultaneously unattainable. A date too far in the future for the characters to live to. ..The viewer is left haunted and spellbound by the sumptuous visual realization of the lives of the characters in Hong Kong, and by the bravado and imagination of the science fiction story within a story. For someone unfamiliar with Wong Kar-wai's earlier work this could all seem like a bridge too far. But fans of 'in the mood for love' will recognize an accomplished master letting loose with all the tools and imagination in a considerable arsenal.
From a negative reviewOverlong, pretentious, and overstuffed with voice-overs and affected quotes, Wong Kar-wai's 2046 looks beautiful and is indeed sensuous, but the film is ultimately so muddled that most viewers will find themselves becoming lost in some kind of vague storytelling fog. The actors are all handsomely costumed and the art direction is gorgeous, but the story is so convoluted and mysterious, that the film ends up totally being off putting and really quite boring.
In the claustrophobic world of 2046 the characters exist in a netherworld of dream and memory, holed up in tiny flats, narrow corridors, and small intimate restaurants. ...The Asian actresses are absolutely gorgeous, but they all look the same, so it took me an hour to figure out who was who, and by then, I'd lost the thread of the story. But the major problem with 2046 is that it's just too arty and self conscious for its own good...It all becomes rather tawdry and yawn inducing after a while.
I'm still not quite sure what exactly 2046 is supposed to be. It is the number of a hotel room which people have trouble leaving? Or is it a year in the future where part of the story is set? Or is it perhaps some kind of date? Or does it just exist in Chow's memories and writings? One thing is for sure, this movie moves so slowly that you'll swear that 2046 is also the number of minutes in the film's running length, by the end you'll feel like you have boarded Chow's train too, as you try to stay awake through this one.