Fallen Angels (1995) Hong Kong
Fallen Angels Image Cover
Additional Images
Director:Wong, Kar Wai, Kaneshiro, Takeshi, Lai, Leon, Mok, Karen, Reis, Michelle, Yeung, Charlie
Studio:Chan Ye-Cheng
Writer:Kar Wai Wong
Rating:7.5 (8,743 votes)
Date Added:2012-06-05
ASIN:738329012021
Awards:8 wins & 6 nominations
Genre:Chinese films
IMDb:0112913
Duration:1:36:00
Aspect Ratio:1.85 : 1
Sound:Mono
Languages:Cantonese
Subtitles:English
LAC code:300001291
DVD or VHS:DVD
Original:original
Wong, Kar Wai, Kaneshiro, Takeshi, Lai, Leon, Mok, Karen, Reis, Michelle, Yeung, Charlie  ...  (Director)
Kar Wai Wong  ...  (Writer)
 
Leon Lai  ...  Wong Chi-Ming
Michelle Reis  ...  The Killer's Agent
Takeshi Kaneshiro  ...  He Zhiwu
Charlie Yeung  ...  Charlie
Karen Mok  ...  Punkie
Fai-hung Chan  ...  The Man Forced to Eat Icecream
Man-Lei Chan  ...  He Zhiwu's father
Toru Saito  ...  Sato
To-hoi Kong  ...  Ah-hoi
Lee-na Kwan  ...  Woman Pressed to Buy Vegetables
Yuk-ho Wu  ...  Man forced to have his clothes washed
Comments: DCH 114

Summary: Fallen Angels was originally planned as one section of director Wong Kar-Wai's best-known film, Chungking Express, but eventually it grew into its own distinct and delirious shape. In many ways, Fallen Angels may be the better film, a dark, frantic fun-house ride through Hong Kong's nighttime world. Part of the film is a love story between two people who have barely met: a young, ultra-hip hit man (Leon Lai) and the dreamy operative (Michele Reis) who plans his jobs. Much of the movie is given over to a very strange subplot about a manic mute (Takeshi Kaneshiro) who goes on bizarre nocturnal prowls through a closed food market--like almost everything else in Wong's films, this is antic, stylish, and oddly touching, all at the same time. It must be said that, also like Wong's other films, Fallen Angels is fragmented and oblique to the point of occasional incomprehensibility…but then suddenly something wild or wonderful happens, such as the moment when the killer leaves the scene of a spectacular shooting and is promptly waylaid by a cheerful old school chum on a public bus. These coups--whether lyrical, violent, or simply "how on earth did they get that shot?"--are tossed off by Wong and cinematographer Christopher Doyle with all the cool of the hired killer, as though the movie were a cigarette dangling from a pair of oh-so-casual lips. This is exactly why so many otherwise calm critics fell all over themselves in hailing Wong Kar-Wai as one of the most exciting filmmakers of his generation. --Robert Horton