There didnt seem to be anywhere for Tsai Ming-Liang to go after the apocalyptic finale of The Wayward Cloud, but his latest feature offers a purgatorial way station: the fetid metropolis of Kuala Lumpur. There, in the directors birthplace, is where favourite cast member Lee Kang-sheng collapses in his role as the homeless Hsiao-Kang, whos taken in by a Bangladeshi worker named Rawang (Norman Atun) and nursed back to health. Rawang doesnt exactly name the reason he tends to Hsiao-Kang, but we think we might know; at any rate, Hsiao-Kang is on the prowl for a woman after he bounces back, and finds her in Chyi (Cen Shiang-Chyi), a waitress and sometime-caregiver to her bosss comatose son. However, the real star of the film is the city, which proves to be an even more enveloping place that the directors adopted home of Taipei and offers the perfect backdrop to the pinched anguish of our leads. The film tries your patience sometimes, meaning you have to be a fan of the directors still frames and lack of dialogue and forward action, but Ive been a fan ever since The River and dont intend to look back yet. Those of us with the intestinal fortitude to stick out the often aimless action will be rewarded with an accumulating mood and antic humour that will make the experience well worthwhile, to say nothing of the change of locale, which switches the Tsai mentality from the cold pseudo-modernism of Taipei to the hotter, more sprawling locale of Kuala Lumpur. This probably isnt the movie for Tsai neophytes to start with, but its a good, satisfying movie for those who count themselves as supporters.
(Homegreen)I Don't Want to Sleep Alone
Tsai Ming-Liang
BY Travis Mackenzie HooverPublished Mar 15, 2007