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Flirt
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Directed by Hal Hartley.
A lover, an ultimatum, a phone call, and a gun: these elements are found in each segment of Hal Hartley's Flirt, an experimental comedy-drama that essentially repeats the same story three times. But while the basic narrative remains the same -- a congenital flirt must decide whether or not to commit to a current lover, who otherwise will marry someone else -- the details differ greatly, from the location of the film to the gender of the participants. The initial segment, set in New York, tells the tale with a male flirt in turmoil over his relationship with a woman. The film then moves to Berlin, where the same drama is played out amongst a gay male couple, with an added touch of self-reflexive humor. The third and final episode takes place in Tokyo, with a female flirt and a more abstract cinematic approach, including several sequences in traditional Japanese pantomime. ~ Judd Blaise, All Movie Guide
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
The ambitious structural device of Flirt -- essentially telling the same story in three different contexts -- is an intriguing idea, but makes for a boring movie. This is simply because the repetition becomes tiresome, with audiences not only knowing what will happen next, but almost having the lines memorized by the end of one viewing. The first segment is a straightforward tale in New York, told in the humorous Hartley style with a lot of quick deadpan dialogue. Switching to the less-witty second segment with the gay lovers in Berlin is jarring, and Hartley seems to cushion the blow with a little self-reflexive humor. In some lighthearted bits intercut with the dramatic story line, construction workers on a break discuss the film itself and its merits or failures. One wishes more of the movie could be like this, aware of its own structure and funny about it. Instead, the three stories mostly just play out, concluding with the final segment in Tokyo, which is strangely lacking in Hartley's trademark dialogue and requires more patience to watch. By staging the same story in three different time zones, it seems that important cultural comparisons would emerge. However, the nature of the style dominates over any character development, leaving the romantic situations hollow and flat. What Flirt turns out to be is a good study in form, but it doesn't quite emotionally register. ~ Andrea LeVasseur, All Movie Guide
 



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i-heart-art
i-heart-art
loved it.
m_rturnage
m_rturnage
loved it.
wenweimar
wenweimar
loved it.
badwisdom
badwisdom
lost interest.