• About
  • Contact
  • Write For Us
No Result
View All Result
Donate
The Asian Cut
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Essays
  • Director Retrospectives
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Essays
  • Director Retrospectives
No Result
View All Result
The Asian Cut
No Result
View All Result

Criterion Recollection: Healing Heartbreaks in ‘Chungking Express’

Rose Ho by Rose Ho
October 26, 2022
in Criterion Recollection, Review
0
Takeshi Kaneshiro and Brigitte Lin in Chungking Express

Photo Courtesy of Jet Tone Production

⭐⭐⭐⭐

Rating: 4 out of 5.

Chungking Express is Wong Kar-wai’s third film and the one that garnered him international attention in the ‘90s. The director notably broke away from the typical crime and comedy genres of Hong Kong cinema of the time to produce a frenetic, colourful, and soulful drama/romance in one of the busiest and diverse locations in the city, Chungking Mansions (where the movie takes inspiration for half its name. The other half is for the snack bar, Midnight Express).

In the two loosely connected halves of the film, Takeshi Kaneshiro and Tony Leung Chiu-wai play a couple of broken-hearted beat cops who find themselves roused from their sorrows by a mysterious, beautiful criminal played by Brigitte Lin and a quirky, fast food server played by Faye Wong.

The film was completed over the course of three months while Wong was working on post-production for Ashes of Time, a large-scale wuxia film, which also features Leung in a supporting role. That tight schedule helped lend an intensity and feverish energy to Chungking Express. Wong’s frequent collaborator, cinematographer Christopher Doyle also lent his distinctive eye (and his apartment) to production.

RelatedStories

Sopheanith Thong and Deka Nine as Nisay and Thida in Whisperings of the Moon, having an intimate conversation at an amusement park.

Inside Out 2026 Review: ‘Whisperings of the Moon’ Forever Memorialises Its Late Director

Shim Eun-kyung as Li in Two Seasons Two Strangers

Where Words Fail, ‘Two Seasons, Two Strangers’ Connects

Takeshi Kaneshiro in Chungking Express
Photo Courtesy of Jet Tone Production

Like many of director Wong’s other works, Chungking Express relies heavily on atmospherics built on lush visuals and music. Important character details that would typically have thematic relevance are left uninvestigated, and major storylines are left somewhat unresolved as a result. The police officer roles of the two male leads are seemingly inconsequential and do not really factor into their relationships to the women they obsess over, even though both women break the law. The criminal plot that Lin’s character faces (some men she uses to smuggle drugs out of Hong Kong disappear and she must figure out her next steps) is of minor importance to the film’s ultimate focus on meaningful relationships.

What’s truly memorable are the candy-coloured filters, rushing camera movements, canted angles and the repeated use of “California Dreamin’” by the Mamas and the Papas plus Faye Wong’s Cantonese cover of the Cranberries’ “Dreams.” These elements add to the wistful quality to the romantic values that underpin the film. And who can forget those cans of expiring pineapple that signify the end of young love?

The small but very attractive cast makes it very easy to fall in love with the characters. In the first story, Lin is deliberately heavily disguised with a blonde wig and red sunglasses as the unflappable femme fatale of the film. Her cool, grown-up, devil-may-care attitude contrasts sharply with the puppy dog affections of Kaneshiro’s young cop who is dealing with the pangs of first heartbreak. The Taiwanese-Japanese Kaneshiro uses his multilingual abilities to add to the multicultural flavour of Chungking Express as his character desperately pines for an unseen ex-girlfriend over the phone, and then tries to find someone new to fall in love with. Eventually, a chaste encounter with Lin’s gangster one evening helps him get out of his slump.

Tony Leung Chiu-wai in Chungking Express
Photo Courtesy of Jet Tone Production

Conversely, in Chungking Express‘s second story, a more lighthearted and long-term romance is struck between an introverted cop and a zany waitress. Faye Wong, a huge Cantopop star in real life, is charmingly manic as the gangly and infatuated young woman who awkwardly tries to insert herself into Leung’s character’s life the moment she sees him approaching the food stall where she works. Who can blame her? It is quite remarkable (especially for anyone who has only encountered Leung via his compelling turn as Wenwu in Marvel’s Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings) to witness a young and talented Leung, with the same gentle, sweet, and magnetic persona that he has carried into his current middle-age.

With dreamy, oversaturated colours; blurry, kinetic camera movements; bustling, claustrophobic settings; and lonely, lovesick characters, Chungking Express is an intimate and poetic ode to youth, love, heartbreak, connection, and self-discovery in a city like no other.

Now Streaming On

JustWatch

The Review

Tags: Brigitte LinCriterion RecollectionFaye WongHong KongTakeshi KaneshiroTony Leung Chiu-waiWong Kar-wai
ShareTweet
Rose Ho

Rose Ho

Rose Ho is a film critic. After her art criticism degree, she started her personal film blog, Rose-Coloured Ray-Bans, and joined the visual arts editorial team of LooseLeaf Magazine by Project 40 Collective, a creative platform for Canadian artists and writers of pan-Asian background. In 2020, she received the Emerging Critic Award from the Toronto Film Critics Association.

Recommended For You

Lee Byung-hun as Yoo Man-su holding a flower pot over his head in No Other Choice
Best Of

The Asian Cut’s Favourite Movies of 2025

March 16, 2026
George Lam as Shiomi Akutagawa taking a photo around soldiers sitting on tanks parading through the streets in Boat People.
Essay

‘Boat People’ Confronts the Ideas of ‘Civil War’ with More Complexity and Issues of Its Own

May 16, 2024
Patra Au as Angie sitting on a chair outside a building in the Hong Kong movie All Shall Be Well.
Review

HKIFF 2024: ‘All Shall Be Well’ Until Tragedy Strikes

Andy Lau as George Lam holding a tablet sitting across from Eddie Peng as Eddie Fong in I Did It My Way.
Review

‘I Did It My Way’ Fails to Live Up to Its Potential

Empty movie theatre
Festival Report

Many Happy Returns: Notes on the 18th Five Flavours Asian Film Festival

January 15, 2025
Curtis Ho Pak Lim as Alan looking up, standing in a stairwell in Time Still Turns the Pages
Review

‘Time Still Turns the Pages’ Draws Melodramatic, Yet Evergreen Lessons

Next Post
Director Park Chan-wook standing in front of a window

Park Chan-wook on 'Decision to Leave' & Learning From 'Oldboy'

Popular Stories

Photo still from Monsoon Blue

Reel Asian 2024: ‘Monsoon Blue’ Sketches the Soul in Transformation

Carlo Aquino as Eric and Gio Gahol as Carlo standing next to each other in an elevator in the animated movie The Missing.

‘The Missing’ Is a Profound Rotoscope Journey of Acceptance and Healing

Zaarin Bushra as Pooja in the car with her family in White Elephant film

Andrew Chung on Representation and Appropriation in ‘White Elephant’

4 years ago
Adarsh Gourav as Nasir directing behind a camera in Superboys of Malegaon

‘Superboys of Malegaon’ Celebrates Bollywood’s Underdogs

Saamer Usmani as Ash in Shook

Amar Wala Builds an Ode to Family and Life in ‘Shook’

  • About
  • Contact
  • Write For Us

Copyright © The Asian Cut 2026. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Essays
  • Director Retrospectives
  • Write For Us
  • Contact

Copyright © The Asian Cut 2026. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use