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Chungking Express

Chungking Express - A real delight and a beautiful film created out of love and loneliness. Scene after scene impress th

 

This film is not currently available on DVD.

Film Description

A real delight and a beautiful film created out of love and loneliness. Scene after scene impress themselves upon the memory.

 

 

Film Details

Director Wong Kar-Wai
Starring Tony Leung, Bridget Lin, Faye Wong, Takeshi Kaneshiro

 

Country Hong Kong Language CANTONESE/MANDARIN   Year 1994

Film Media

13 Stills

 

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Reviews & Articles

Share your thoughts and opinions - write a review

 

Review by Film lover on 4th April 2000

“We may not know each other, but we could be friends some day.” Such thoughts encapsulate the bittersweet, time-shifted melancholy that Wong Kar Wai brings to his collage of pre-handover Hong Kong – two almost overlapping stories illuminated and made romantic by a cathode-blue fluorescence and more than enough X-factors to fill an entire career.

The first, with its allusive frames of neon-lit stop-motion, is crammed with times and dates; food markets; bank notes; late-nite convenience stores and the disposable iconography of consumerism as plain-clothes cop 223 pursues ‘romance’ and triads within the maze-like Chungking Mansions – the migrant chatter and tide of leather and electronic goods epitomizing Hong Kong’s tiger economy as well as its cramped, boxed spaces… But look beyond the flashing immediacy of the genre motifs Tarantino so admired (an almost identical airport lounge sequence resurfaces in Jackie Brown) and there seems a real anxiety concerning the imminent date of handover to Communist China: “…even cling film expires” admits 223 and he must console himself with a connection all too fragile and consigned to personal history: “If memory can be tinned, I hope it never has a sell-by date.”

A myriad of themes then gracefully converge in the flights and dreams and changing perceptions of the second story – and uniformed policeman 663’s nightly visits to the Midnight Express takeaway. Here he is slightly bemused by new waitress Faye Wong listening repeatedly to the Mamas & Papas’ California Dreaming or peering coquettishly over dark glasses. She provides him with secretly adoring glances and the tone becomes sweeter, the camerawork more langorous: a model aeroplane submerged in a fish tank; soft electric light and faded sunshine; a ceiling fan; a paper plane; the roar of a commercial airliner… And 663 dreamily recalling the stewardess who has recently left him: a beautiful runway at night and romantic music playing over an in-flight safety recording spoken in English.

Chungking Express shows Wong Kar Wai as an exceptional and lyrical film artist. While the nuances are delicate – and incorporate an almost Japanese ‘I-novel’ sensibility alongside the irresistible pop video veneer – his characters remain wonderfully appealing. 663 is “clearing the runway for the next flight…” and we leave him and Faye with a warm-hearted feeling that things will probably work out.

 

 

Review by Paul Scott on 14th June 2004

“We may not know each other, but we could be friends some day.” Such thoughts encapsulate the bittersweet, time-shifted melancholy that Wong Kar Wai brings to his collage of pre-handover Hong Kong – two almost overlapping stories illuminated and made romantic by a cathode-blue fluorescence and more than enough X-factors to fill an entire career.

The first, with its allusive frames of neon-lit stop-motion, is crammed with times and dates; food markets; bank notes; late-nite convenience stores and the disposable iconography of consumerism as plain-clothes cop 223 pursues ‘romance’ and triads within the maze-like Chungking Mansions – the migrant chatter and tide of leather and electronic goods epitomizing Hong Kong’s tiger economy as well as its cramped, boxed spaces… But look beyond the flashing immediacy of the genre motifs Tarantino so admired (an almost identical airport lounge sequence resurfaces in Jackie Brown) and there seems a real anxiety concerning the imminent date of handover to Communist China: “…even cling film expires” admits 223 and he must console himself with a connection all too fragile and consigned to personal history: “If memory can be tinned, I hope it never has a sell-by date.”

A myriad of themes then gracefully converge in the flights and dreams and changing perceptions of the second story – and uniformed policeman 663’s nightly visits to the Midnight Express takeaway. Here he is slightly bemused by new waitress Faye Wong listening repeatedly to the Mamas & Papas’ California Dreaming or peering coquettishly over dark glasses. She provides him with secretly adoring glances and the tone becomes sweeter, the camerawork more langorous: a model aeroplane submerged in a fish tank; soft electric light and faded sunshine; a ceiling fan; a paper plane; the roar of a commercial airliner… And 663 dreamily recalling the stewardess who has recently left him: a beautiful runway at night and romantic music playing over an in-flight safety recording spoken in English.

Chungking Express shows Wong Kar Wai as an exceptional and lyrical film artist. While the nuances are delicate – and incorporate an almost Japanese ‘I-novel’ sensibility alongside the irresistible pop video veneer – his characters remain wonderfully appealing. 663 is “clearing the runway for the next flight…” and we leave him and Faye with a warm-hearted feeling that things will probably work out.

View more reviews by Paul Scott

 

 

Review by MB on 14th July 2000

“We may not know each other, but we could be friends some day.” Such thoughts encapsulate the bittersweet, time-shifted melancholy that Wong Kar Wai brings to his collage of pre-handover Hong Kong – two almost overlapping stories illuminated and made romantic by a cathode-blue fluorescence and more than enough X-factors to fill an entire career.

The first, with its allusive frames of neon-lit stop-motion, is crammed with times and dates; food markets; bank notes; late-nite convenience stores and the disposable iconography of consumerism as plain-clothes cop 223 pursues ‘romance’ and triads within the maze-like Chungking Mansions – the migrant chatter and tide of leather and electronic goods epitomizing Hong Kong’s tiger economy as well as its cramped, boxed spaces… But look beyond the flashing immediacy of the genre motifs Tarantino so admired (an almost identical airport lounge sequence resurfaces in Jackie Brown) and there seems a real anxiety concerning the imminent date of handover to Communist China: “…even cling film expires” admits 223 and he must console himself with a connection all too fragile and consigned to personal history: “If memory can be tinned, I hope it never has a sell-by date.”

A myriad of themes then gracefully converge in the flights and dreams and changing perceptions of the second story – and uniformed policeman 663’s nightly visits to the Midnight Express takeaway. Here he is slightly bemused by new waitress Faye Wong listening repeatedly to the Mamas & Papas’ California Dreaming or peering coquettishly over dark glasses. She provides him with secretly adoring glances and the tone becomes sweeter, the camerawork more langorous: a model aeroplane submerged in a fish tank; soft electric light and faded sunshine; a ceiling fan; a paper plane; the roar of a commercial airliner… And 663 dreamily recalling the stewardess who has recently left him: a beautiful runway at night and romantic music playing over an in-flight safety recording spoken in English.

Chungking Express shows Wong Kar Wai as an exceptional and lyrical film artist. While the nuances are delicate – and incorporate an almost Japanese ‘I-novel’ sensibility alongside the irresistible pop video veneer – his characters remain wonderfully appealing. 663 is “clearing the runway for the next flight…” and we leave him and Faye with a warm-hearted feeling that things will probably work out.

View more reviews by MB

 

 

Browse all Film Reviews

 

Article - "Chungking Express" by Paul Scott
Monday 14th June 2004

“We may not know each other, but we could be friends some day.” Such thoughts encapsulate the bittersweet, time-shifted melancholy that Wong Kar Wai brings to his collage of pre-handover Hong Kong – two almost overlapping stories illuminated and made romantic by a ca...  View article in full

 

 

Article - "Wong Kar-Wai" by Michael Brooke
Sunday 12th December 2004

David Lynch once said that film-making is like building a bridge out of little glass strands, a metaphor that fits Wong Kar-Wai's work better than most. Not only does it combine apt impressions of poised delicacy and scintillating imagery, but it also reflects Wong'...  View article in full

 

 

 

 

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Collections & Lists

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