July Rhapsody: A Midlife Crisis Served with a Side of Existential Dread (and a Teacher-Student Affair)
Ann Hui’s *July Rhapsody* isn’t your typical feel-good millennial kickoff film. Forget hopeful futures; this movie seems to be taking a long, melancholic look back at…well, everything. It follows Lam Yiu-kwok, a 40-something literature teacher whose life feels less like a novel and more like a particularly tedious syllabus.
We first meet Lam lounging on the beach, reading Chinese history – an early sign that he’s probably more interesting *thinking* about the past than actually living in the present. His days are a rinse-and-repeat cycle of poetry lessons to unenthusiastic teens, a cramped apartment, and a marriage slowly suffocating under the weight of routine. He’s basically a human beige cardigan.
But things get…complicated. A flirtation with a student (because apparently, midlife crises involve questionable decisions) throws his already shaky world into further turmoil. And just when he thinks it can’t get worse, an old friend resurfaces, dragging a 20-year-old secret along with him. Turns out Lam’s wife has a history – and it involves that very same friend.
Hui wisely avoids melodrama. This isn’t about explosive confrontations; it’s about the quiet devastation of ordinary lives unraveling. The camera mostly sticks with Lam, but Chan (the wife) is far from a passive figure. She’s a woman navigating morality, conscience, and her own desire for…something more. Anita Mui delivers a quietly powerful performance as this typical housewife who’s anything *but*.
*July Rhapsody* isn’t afraid to tackle some uncomfortable truths about gender roles in middle age – the burdens placed on women versus the quiet desperation of men grappling with unfulfilled potential. It also subtly nods to Hong Kong’s anxieties surrounding the 1997 handover, a sense of insecurity that permeates daily life like a damp chill.
The film’s title itself is a clue: it alludes to a classic poem about mourning lost glory, suggesting that Lam (and perhaps Hong Kong) are lamenting a past that can never be recovered. And the imagery – particularly footage of the Three Gorges Dam project – adds another layer of sadness, hinting at irreversible changes and the cost of progress.
Ultimately, *July Rhapsody* is a beautifully bleak portrait of an ordinary man’s forties – a bit messy, ethically questionable in places, but undeniably moving. It’s not exactly a party, but it *is* a surprisingly poignant reminder that life rarely goes according to plan…and sometimes involves a few too many secrets and some very bad choices.
(Currently streaming on various VOD platforms. Prepare for existential dread.)