Blue Gate Crossing has a pretty simple
storyline. A girl likes boys so she asks her friend to help her
wooing him. The boy ends up liking the friend and not the girl. A
common storyline if you ask me, but this one puts a spin to it.
Meng Kerou (Guey Lun-Mei) is a boyish
high school students who help her friend, Lin Yuezhen (Liang
Shui-Hui), woo Zhang Shihao (Chen Bolin). For Yuezhen, Kerou ends up
delivering messages and letters to Zhang Shihao, but Yuezhen is too
shy to really make an appearance in front of him. Zhang Shihao starts
thinking there's really no Yuezhen and it's Kerou who likes him.
That's not the whole story, of course. (That's only how it started.
And when I narrate it like that, it seems to be pretty confusing!)
The movie starts with Yuezhen
fantasizing a future with Zhang Shihao. And I think it's pretty
amazing how the movie ends with Meng Kerou also fantasizing about Zhang
Shihao but in a completely different manner. Blue Gate Crossing
relies on good story-telling and solid characters to deliver a pretty
good movie.
This movie moves pretty fast. The pace
didn't dilly-dally but you'll never feel that it's rushed. Though
it's only an hour-and-twenty-minute long, there's a coherence to the
plot and a sense of completion to it. Some things aren't said outright and
are left with the actions and implied dialogues of the characters.
But it's not confusing, neither is it misleading.
I love how they treated Meng Kerou's
dilemma, giving it a human touch. It's not just about wanting Yuezhen
to like her back, but it's also understanding why she likes girls
when according to her, girls should like boys. It's finding little pieces
herself and understanding herself better. I also appreciate how Zhang
Shihao approaches this confession from Kerou. It's not about pushing for
her to be a girl since girls are supposed to like boys. It's about
wishing that she likes boys so she could like him, too.
This movie seems to understand the
little plights of teenagers. A teenager's problem can be pretty shallow sometimes, but
other times, it can really tug at your heart. Shallow or not, it's
never something to laugh about.
I greatly (let's put more emphasis on greatly!) enjoyed the silly but quite adorable series
of back-and-forth bickering between Meng Kerou and Zhang Shihao. They
have so much chemistry that I can't help but enjoy their every scene
together. When Zhang Shihao first shows his dimples, I melt. When
Meng Kerou asks him to kiss her, I squealed a little. (Then we learn the reason why she asks for that kiss, which is pretty heart-breaking.) Every little
moment they have with each other is just so precious!
What I love best about this movie is
the consistent writing. For some reason, I particularly love how the
characters would repeat their questions in the same manner and same
tone. I love how they keep on asking the same question unless they'd
get an answer or be too infuriated to keep on asking. I appreciate
how the characters grow with the story but they keep a pretty solid
personality. Meng Kerou is strong-willed and will speak her mind in
front of Zhang Shihao. Zhang Shihao is playful but knows when to be
serious. I love that throughout the story, they grow up but didn't
really change.
Some people probably won't like the
ending, but I certainly did. They're young, they're in their teens.
At that point in life, who in the world has the answer to everything?
This is actually my second time
watching this movie, but this is the first time that I watched it
with subtitles. I am pretty glad I took the time to watch it again.
If I didn't, the entire meaning of the story would have been lost to me.
Don't ask me if there's anything I didn't like about the movie,
because right now, I cannot think of any. Maybe when I'm not running
high with these stupid happy thoughts and emotions, I might end up coming up with
some things I didn't like about it. But nothing really strikes me at the moment,
so maybe there's really nothing to hate.
I ended up loving this movie a bit too
much that I end up wanting to watch more Taiwanese movies, and that's
a first. I should probably explore more of their film offerings.
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