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In the Mood for Love

Original title: Fa yeung nin wah
  • 2000
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
8.1/10
181K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
776
6
Maggie Cheung and Tony Leung Chiu-wai in In the Mood for Love (2000)
Trailer 1
Play trailer1:54
5 Videos
99+ Photos
Dark RomanceTragic RomanceDramaRomance

Two neighbors form a strong bond after both suspect extramarital activities of their spouses. However, they agree to keep their bond platonic so as not to commit similar wrongs.Two neighbors form a strong bond after both suspect extramarital activities of their spouses. However, they agree to keep their bond platonic so as not to commit similar wrongs.Two neighbors form a strong bond after both suspect extramarital activities of their spouses. However, they agree to keep their bond platonic so as not to commit similar wrongs.

  • Director
    • Wong Kar-Wai
  • Writer
    • Wong Kar-Wai
  • Stars
    • Maggie Cheung
    • Tony Leung Chiu-wai
    • Ping-Lam Siu
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.1/10
    181K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    776
    6
    • Director
      • Wong Kar-Wai
    • Writer
      • Wong Kar-Wai
    • Stars
      • Maggie Cheung
      • Tony Leung Chiu-wai
      • Ping-Lam Siu
    • 551User reviews
    • 66Critic reviews
    • 87Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
      • 45 wins & 50 nominations total

    Videos5

    In the Mood for Love
    Trailer 1:54
    In the Mood for Love
    In The Mood For Love: The Criterion Collection [Blu-Ray]
    Trailer 1:23
    In The Mood For Love: The Criterion Collection [Blu-Ray]
    In The Mood For Love: The Criterion Collection [Blu-Ray]
    Trailer 1:23
    In The Mood For Love: The Criterion Collection [Blu-Ray]
    In The Mood For Love
    Trailer 1:23
    In The Mood For Love
    How 'Edge of Tomorrow' and Wong Kar-wai Inspired 'Madame Web'
    Clip 2:47
    How 'Edge of Tomorrow' and Wong Kar-wai Inspired 'Madame Web'
    How Marvel's Been Paving the Way for Shang-Chi
    Clip 3:54
    How Marvel's Been Paving the Way for Shang-Chi

    Photos861

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    + 854
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    Top cast16

    Edit
    Maggie Cheung
    Maggie Cheung
    • Su Li-zhen - Mrs. Chan
    Tony Leung Chiu-wai
    Tony Leung Chiu-wai
    • Chow Mo-wan
    • (as Tony Chiu Wai Leung)
    Ping-Lam Siu
    • Ah Ping
    Tung Cho 'Joe' Cheung
    Tung Cho 'Joe' Cheung
    • Man living in Mr. Koo's apartment
    • (as Tung Joe Cheung)
    Rebecca Pan
    Rebecca Pan
    • Mrs. Suen
    Kelly Lai Chen
    Kelly Lai Chen
    • Mr. Ho
    • (as Lai Chen)
    Man-Lei Chan
    Man-Lei Chan
    • Mr. Koo
    Kam-Wah Koo
    Chien Szu-Ying
    Chien Szu-Ying
    • Amah
    • (as Tsi-Ang Chin)
    Paulyn Sun
    Paulyn Sun
    • Mrs. Chow
    • (voice)
    • (as Jia-Jun Sun)
    Roy Cheung
    Roy Cheung
    • Mr. Chan
    • (voice)
    Po-chun Chow
    Hsien Yu
    Julien Carbon
    • French tourist
    • (uncredited)
    Laurent Courtiaud
    • French reporter
    • (uncredited)
    Charles de Gaulle
    Charles de Gaulle
    • Self (1966 visit to Cambodia)
    • (archive footage)
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Wong Kar-Wai
    • Writer
      • Wong Kar-Wai
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews551

    8.1180.5K
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    Featured reviews

    10kyleroberts

    Discover the beauty genially encrypted in "Asian Beauty"

    I was recommended this film as one of the best love stories ever told. And as I am huge fan of love, I bought the tickets and sat myself in the theatre. After 90 minutes I left the theatre with nothing but disappointment and the theme song as the only positive thing of the film. I was appalled at the story itself, that two people can love each other but be so afraid as to never act it. I just couldn't go passed the language barrier and the cultural barrier. The second time I ran into it... I was in a different mood, no longer had any expectation ... and had more patience, more relaxed mind to "see" the film... and as soon as I opened my eyes, I discovered the love... the beauty of the film. I went beyond the language and the love story and saw the acting (not even for a moment did I ever felt like they were acting!) and the cinematography. The first time I heard a definition of what a film is, I was told that it should be a chain of perfectly balanced photographs (shots) and this is the film to match the description. Almost every shot has an idea behind it, and combined with the music... and the light effects... the result is just a masterpiece! And a masterpiece is just something that you must have in your collection of films.
    9j30bell

    Wonderful Hong Kong Art-house.

    Two people living in the same flat complex find their partners are having an affair with each other. As they try and piece together how it happened, they also embark on an emotional journey that aches for a resolution…

    Building on his previous success with Happy Together and Chungking Express, Wong Kar Wai gives us this rather old fashioned and marvellous story of reawakened passions, yearning and unrequited love.

    Possibly, In the Mood for Love is not to everyone's taste. It wanders in rather lazily at 98mins: not particularly long for a film, but it appears longer because not a lot really happens. But this lazy feel conceals a quite tightly constructed film. Most of the story is cunningly woven around a series of set piece role plays, where the characters act out presumed scenarios between their respective spouses, trying to work out how the affair started. I say cunning because, of course, this makes it difficult for the audience (and the characters) to tell what is "in-role" and what is genuine.

    If all this sounds rather arty and self-conscience, that's because it is. Unashamedly so. And it is played to perfection by two of Hong Kong's finest, Maggie Cheung and Leung Chui Wai, with some excellent support from Ping Lam Siu and Rebecca Pan.

    It is also a virtuoso performance by Wong Kar Wai, who treats the audience to a sensory, and sensual, overload. Bringing together Christopher Doyle (who later deployed his lush, over-ripe style on Hero) and Pin Bing Lee (whose beautifully understated style can be seen on Springtime in a Small Town) was cinematographic genius. It has all the bold beauty of Doyle, without, frankly, the Athena-poster cheesiness of his work on Hero. The music, as always with Wong, is prominent. From Nat King Cole singing in Spanish, to the haunting strings of the main theme, it perfectly matches the eclectic beauty of the images.

    All in all a top film, whether judged on plot, acting, cinematography or soundtrack. Similar to, but more accessible than, Wim Wenders' Wings of Desire, this is a beautiful, old fashioned story about love lost and regained.

    And watch out for Tony Leung's hotel room 2046, which presaged Wong's recent film of the same name.
    10OttoVonB

    The most disarming romance ever filmed.

    In 60s Hong Kong, a man and woman move in the same day into adjacent apartments with their respective spouses. Soon they suspect their ever absent spouses of having an affair with one-another. A strange bond emerges between the man and woman as they cope with their sadness by taking turns playing each other's spouse, before a more complex bond emerges...

    No summary can do it justice, for Hong Kong auteur Wong Kar-Wai's "In the Mood for Love" is nothing short of a miracle. A story about sadness that manages to be touching and at times funny. A romance that never feels forced or fake. No doubt the director's method has a lot to do with that.

    Directed from an inexistent screenplay (though the concept largely flows from a Japanese short story) to favor improvisation, the film is immediately set apart by the freshness of it's performances. All the film revolves around that and the rest is pure enhancement. At the core of the film are two characters that will ease into your heart and stay there long after the end credits roll: Maggie Cheung and Tony Leung are simply amazing and no language barrier undermines a single fragment of immediacy and truth they display. The additional material is also top-notch: the films is magnificent to behold (in part lensed by "Hero"'s Christopher Doyle) and the music is heartbreaking.

    This is something everybody must see, if only because it is by far the most heartfelt, mature and authentic "love story" out there. Unmissable.
    8brooke-25

    In the Mood for a Lovely Film

    Beautiful film set in 1962 Hong Kong about a man (Mr. Chow) and woman (Mrs. Chan) who become close friends when they suspect their spouses are having an affair. Stylistically, the film is also beautiful. Wong Kar-Wai uses a lot of slow motion and close-ups on parts of the body (feet, hands, waist). The film itself has a reticence and properness that suggests its time period. It's sexy without showing everything. Wong Kar-Wai also doesn't allow the audience to see what the spouses look like, suggesting that Mr. Chow and Mrs. Chan should be together. Smoking is even made to look elegant with close-ups of the curls of smoke. A really lovely film. Just prepare yourself for the ending.
    10repulsion

    Possibly Wong Kar-Wai's best film

    It's easy to see why many people consider In the Mood for Love to be Wong Kar-Wai's best film. The toned down appeal of the film, centering on the studied view of a relationship put through an emotional ringer, is a retread into Happy Together territory but without the hyper-kinetic patchwork of jarring film stocks and hyper-saturated sequences that have become a trademark of Kar-Wai's films since Chungking Express. Like Soderbergh's The Limey, this is a different kind of curio for Kar-Wai; where dialogue and plot are forsaken by mood and composition in order to create a tale of two delicate lives in a seemingly confining emotional stasis.

    It's a testament to the genius of Kar-Wai that he is capable to making such a simple tale so resonating. Chow Mo-Wan (Tony Leung) and Su Li-zhen (Maggie Cheung) move in next-door to each other within the same apartment building. He's a journalist who dreams of publishing martial-arts novels and she is a secretary at a shipping company. Their eventual coupling is obvious from the beginning but the pleasure here is the way that Kar-Wai ambiguously paints such a journey with his grand masterstrokes.

    The key to the success of the film is Kar-Wai's use of the interior space, playing with foreground and background planes in ways that are similar to the works of Polanski. During the wooingly sensuous first half of the film, Kar-Wai isolates Leung and Cheung within shots in such a way that the second person in a conversation is never visible. Kar-Wai is concerned with environment and space here, creating a cramped emotional dynamic between his characters. It's also telling that Kar-Wai never chooses to focus on the physicality of Mo-Wan and Li-zhen's spouses. Their faceless partners are noticeably absent from the film, as they are tending to their own love affairs with each other.

    This is not to suggest that In the Mood for Love is a confining experience because Kar-Wai manages to inundate his film with broad splashes of hypnotic camera movement and sound. There is one shot where Cheung's slow, sensual rise up a metaphorical stairway turns into Leung's descent down the very same stairwell; their movements perfectly compliment each other, bookending the shot and creating a sense of erotic duality between the two figures. Their souls have connected but they have yet to physically unite. The erotic displacement of these scenes is both fascinating and frustrating, as two star-crossed lovers reject physical consummation due to their humble fidelity.

    Other scenes in the film are punctuated with brief slow-motion shots of Cheung erotically moving through her interior surroundings, set to Mike Galasso's hauntingly beautiful score. Cheung's dresses beautifully compliment her exterior space as she moves slowly through her surroundings. Her movements slowly build up to what seems to be an inevitable fusion between Li-szhen and her dream lover even though the seduction process seems to be entirely sub-conscious.

    If I make it seem that these two characters are more like two birds unleashing pheromones on each other, it probably isn't that far-fetched of a statement. The tight bond these two characters have with their internal spaces is almost as intense as their relationship to the exteriors. The film rarely moves into an exterior space and when the camera does it is usually to peak through oval windows and symbolic bars that always remind us that these characters are like confined animals. Kar-Wai continues to tease us even when the lovers get close enough to touch, shattering the couple's proximity to each other by shooting them through mirrors or through gaps within articles of clothing located inside of a closet. Mother Nature even seems to respond to their love lust, often unleashing a soft crest of rain over the characters after their bodies have glided near each other.

    Kar-Wai's hauntingly atmospheric shots of a waterfall allowed Leung's Lai Yu-Fai to experience a cathartic release in Happy Together, even if Leslie Cheung's Ho Po-wing was not there to enjoy it with him. By that film's end, love was so inextricably bound to the act of war that a third man's muted declarations of love signaled Yu-Fai's realization that his dreams of seeing a waterfall would bring him inner peace, even if it would not bring him back his lover. Mo-Wan's journey terminates within the confines of a crumbling temple. His own emotional depletion is paralleled nicely with the political climate of his country, and the absence of Li-szhen is only made tolerable by the fact that Kar-Wai allows Mo-Wan to experience a release of sorts. Mo-Wan caters to an ancient myth and his secretive release into a crack in the temple leaves him capable of living his days with the hope that all his loss and heartache somehow served a higher purpose.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Director Wong Kar-Wai was shooting the ending and editing the film a little over a week before its debut at Cannes.
    • Goofs
      When Mr. Chow is waiting with Mrs. Chan for the rain to stop, he is suddenly completely dry despite running through the rain only moments earlier.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      Caption: He remembers those vanished years. As though looking through a dusty window pane, the past is something he could see, but not touch. And everything he sees is blurred and indistinct.

    • Alternate versions
      32 minutes was cut off the end of the film by Wong before release. These additional scenes take place in years subsequent to the film's original ending in 1966, extending into the 1970s, where Mr. Chow and Mrs. Chan meet again several times. The scenes have been included on Criterion's DVD release of the film in 4 bonus tracks, and are available for streaming on the Criterion Channel. The scenes are as follows: Room 2046 (8:05), Postcards (8:27), The Seventies (9:00), A Last Encounter (7:53).
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Mission: Impossible II/Running Free/Passion of Mind/Big Momma's House (2000)
    • Soundtracks
      Yumeji's Theme
      Composed and recorded by Shigeru Umebayashi (as Umebayashi Shigeru)

      Courtesy of Emotion Music Co., Ltd.

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    FAQ21

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 8, 2000 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Hong Kong
      • France
    • Official site
      • Criterion (United States)
    • Languages
      • Cantonese
      • Shanghainese
      • French
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • Deseando amar
    • Filming locations
      • Thailand
    • Production companies
      • Jet Tone Production
      • Block 2 Pictures
      • Paradis Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $3,438,516
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $113,280
      • Feb 4, 2001
    • Gross worldwide
      • $16,515,504
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1(original aspect ratio & theatrical release)

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