Click to read the article
In the Mood for Love (2001)
Rated: PG
Runtime: 1 hr 38 mins
Theatrical Release: 27-10-2000
Synopsis:
Hong Kong 1962, Chow Mo-Wan (Tony Leung Chiu-Wai), a journalist, rents a room from Mr. Koo. He will live there with his wife, a hotel receptionist. It's sheer coincidence that he moves in the same day that Su Lizhen (Maggie Cheung Man-Yuk) moves in next door, at Mrs. Suen's place. Lizhen works as...
Hong Kong 1962, Chow Mo-Wan (Tony Leung Chiu-Wai), a journalist, rents a room from Mr. Koo. He will live there with his wife, a hotel receptionist. It's sheer coincidence that he moves in the same day that Su Lizhen (Maggie Cheung Man-Yuk) moves in next door, at Mrs. Suen's place. Lizhen works as a secretary to Mr. Ho (Lai Chin), the boss of a shipping company. It's also a coincidence that both of them are moving in without help from their spouses. Chow's wife is working her shift at the hotel at the time of the move. Lizhen's husband, Mr Chan, is away on a business trip; he works for a Japanese company, and is often abroad. Despite having convivial and neighbourly landlords, Mr. Chow and Mrs. Chan often find themselves alone and lonely in their respective rooms.
Neither of them ever finds out how it began, but Mr. Chow and Mrs. Chan discover that their respective spouses are having an affair. The discovery shocks both of them. Chow, feeling hurt and wishing to understand how the affair happened, begins finding excuses to spend time with Mrs. Chan. They begin rehearsing what they will say to their spouses when they confront them with what they know. Then Mr. Chow invites Mrs. Chan to help him with a martial-arts series that he is writing for the newspaper. Their meetings are discreet, but people begin to notice. There seems no possibility that they, too, will drift into an affair. But Mrs. Chan's emotional reticence begins to haunt Mr. Chow and he finds his feelings changing. It's almost like being in love.
Four years later, as a Singapore-based reporter covering General De Gaulle's visit to Cambodia, Chow Mo-wan finds himself remembering an old story about a way of unburdening yourself of a secret you don't want anyone to know.
Genre: Foreign Films
Starring: Maggie Cheung, Tony Leung Chiu-Wai, Rebecca Pan, Lai Chen, Siu Ping-Lam
DVD Info
Release:
May 3, 2002
DVD Features:
- Region 1
- Keep Case
- Anamorphic Widescreen - 1.66
- Single Side - Dual Layer
Additional Release Material:
- Alternate Ending
- Deleted Scenes
- Interview - 1. Wong Kar-wai - Director
- Press Confereence
- Traliers - 1. Orignial U.S. Theatrical Trailer
- TV Spots
- Essay
Galleiies/Text:
- Photo Gallery
- Biographies
- Essay on Setting
Interactve Features:
- Interactive Music Essay
Reviews
Cheung and Leung give the most subtle performances of their careers here.
A genuinely wonderful movie; at once old-fashioned and entirely contemporary, subtly erotic, effortlessly cool.
Agençant parfaitement la simplicité de son récit à la complexité de sa mise en scène, Wong Kar Wai nous livre au final un chef-d'%u0153uvre incontestable en son genre.
As this lovely film moves from allegro to adagio, it never loses its pervasive sense of loneliness.
It rivals the impact...Lost Highway [had for me], and is easily one of the best films I have ever seen.
Violins tactilely pull at your heartstrings and induce memories of all the unrequited love affairs or unhappy memories you ever had.
With his spiky haircut, ever-present shades and a cigarette nestled between his fingers, Wong Kar Wai could be a poster boy for Hong Kong cool.
Related Forums
by: BigSPEEGS 4/23/02
News
posted by Scott Weinberg November 01, 2006
I'll keep this short and sweet: If you're a fan of movies like "Hero" and "House of Flying...
posted by Scott Weinberg September 05, 2006
Yimou Zhang, the man who brought you "Hero" and "House of Flying Daggers," has another epic...
posted by Scott Weinberg May 26, 2006
Seems like a lot of high-end actors are lining up to star in Wong Kar Wai's "My Blueberry Nights," a romantic...

Top Critic
