Fallen Angels Movie Until We Meet Again

1995 Hong Kong motion-picture show

Fallen Angels
Fallen-Angels-Poster.jpg

Hong Kong theatrical poster

Traditional 墮落天使
Simplified 堕落天使
Mandarin Duòluò tiānshǐ
Cantonese Exercise6 Lok6 Tin cani Si2
Literally Fallen angels
Directed by Wong Kar-wai
Written past Wong Kar-wai
Produced by Jeffrey Lau
Starring
  • Leon Lai
  • Michelle Reis
  • Takeshi Kaneshiro
  • Charlie Yeung
  • Karen Mok
Cinematography Christopher Doyle
Mark Lee Ping Bin
Joe Chan
Music past Roel A. Garcia
Frankie Chan

Production
company

Jet Tone Productions

Distributed by Kino International

Release date

  • 6 September 1995 (1995-09-06)

Running fourth dimension

96 minutes[ane]
Country Hong Kong
Languages Cantonese
Standard mandarin
Taiwanese
Japanese
English
Box office HK$7.5 million (Hong Kong)
U.s.a.$0.2 million (US)[2]
Fallen Angels
Traditional Chinese 墮落天使
Simplified Chinese 堕落天使

Fallen Angels is a 1995 Hong Kong romantic crime comedy-drama film[3] written and directed by Wong Kar-wai, starring Leon Lai, Michelle Reis, Takeshi Kaneshiro, Charlie Yeung, and Karen Mok.

Plot [edit]

The motion-picture show is composed of ii stories that accept little to do with each other except for a few casual run-ins when some of the characters happen to be in the aforementioned place at the aforementioned fourth dimension. Both stories take place in Hong Kong.

Story I

The story begins with a hit man named Wong Chi-ming (Leon Lai) and a adult female he calls his "partner." They hardly know each other and rarely see each other just she cleans his muddied apartment in club clothes and faxes him blueprints of the places where he is to commit his murders. Infatuated with him, she frequents the bar he goes to only to sit in his seat and fantasize nigh him. One nighttime, Wong has a late nighttime meal at McDonald's where he meets Blondie, who invites him into her apartment. While they spend fourth dimension together, she has illusions that he is the ex-lover who left her for another woman. Wong'south partner finds out virtually the human relationship and, after he tells her he wants to terminate their business relationship, she asks that he practise her one more favor. Wong is killed while attempting to comport out the job.

Story Ii

Wong Chi-ming's partner lives in the same building with Ho Chi-mo (Takeshi Kaneshiro), a crazy runaway who escapes prison. She helps him elude the police when they are searching for him. Ho is mute and still lives with his father. For piece of work, he breaks into other people'southward businesses at night and sells their goods and services, oftentimes forcibly to unwilling customers. He keeps running into the aforementioned girl at night, Charlie. Every time they meet, she cries on his shoulder and tells him the same sob story. Her ex-boyfriend, Johnny, left her for a girl named Blondie. She enlists his help in searching for Blondie. Ho Chi-mo falls in love. After, she stands him up and he changes his ways, starting time a friendship and work relationship with a eating house manager. He begins to film things around him with a video camera. His father passes away; he falls back into abusive habits, going so far every bit to cut off the pilus of a man whose family he in the past forced to consume an excessive amount of water ice cream. He and Charlie practice not come into contact for a few months, but they run into each other while he is masquerading as a business owner. She is in a stewardess uniform and in a new human relationship. She does not admit him.

Sometime later, Ho Chi-mo is in a restaurant sitting by himself ane night when he sees Wong's ex-partner as well sitting by herself. At that place is a silent spark between them that they both experience. She asks him for a ride dwelling house on his motorbike. As they ride off into the nighttime even though she knows it's just a moment she enjoys his warmth.

Bandage [edit]

  • Leon Lai as Wong Chi-ming / Killer
  • Michelle Reis every bit Killer's amanuensis
  • Takeshi Kaneshiro as Ho Chi-mo/ He Zhiwu
  • Charlie Yeung every bit Charlie / Cherry
  • Karen Mok as Punkie / Blondie / Baby
  • Chan Fai-hung as Human being forced to eat ice cream
  • Chan Man-lei every bit Ho Chi-mo'southward father
  • Toru Saito as Sato
  • Benz Kong as Hoi

Development and production [edit]

Originally conceived by Wong as the tertiary story for 1994'southward Chungking Express, information technology was cutting after he decided that it was complete without it. He instead decided to develop the story further into its own feature movie and borrowed elements of Chungking Express, such as themes, locations and methods of filming. Wanting to besides attempt to differentiate it from Chungking and to try something new, Wong decided along with cinematographer Christopher Doyle to shoot mainly at nighttime and using farthermost wide-angle lenses, keeping the camera as close to the talents as possible to give a detached effect from the earth effectually them.

In an interview, Wong had this to say:

...To me, Chungking Express and Fallen Angels are one film that should be iii hours long. I always think these two films should exist seen together as a double bill. In fact, people asked me during an interview for Chungking Express: "You lot've made these two stories which accept no relationship at all to each other, how can you lot connect them?" And I said, 'The main characters of Chungking Limited are not Faye Wong or Takeshi Kaneshiro, merely the city itself, the nighttime and day of Hong Kong. Chungking Limited and Fallen Angels together are the brilliant and nighttime of Hong Kong." I see the films as inter-reversible, the grapheme of Faye Wong could be the character of Takeshi in Fallen Angels; Brigitte Lin in Chungking could be Leon Lai in Fallen Angels. All of their characters are inter-reversible. Also, in Chungking we were shooting from a very long altitude with long lenses, simply the characters seem close to us.

Soundtrack [edit]

Featured in the Fallen Angels soundtrack is a version of "Forget Him" sung by Shirley Kwan, a reworking of the classic past Teresa Teng, and one of the very few "contemporary" Cantopop songs ever used by Wong Kar-wai in his films. In the picture show, the vocal is used as a message from the hitman to his partner. One track played prominently throughout the film is "Because I'g Absurd" by Nogabe "Robinson" Randriaharimalala. Information technology samples Karmacoma by Massive Assault. The Laurie Anderson slice "Speak My Language" is used as well.

The Flight Pickets version of "Only Yous" was used in the final scene of the film.[iv]

Critical reception [edit]

In the Chicago Sun-Times, Roger Ebert gave Fallen Angels iii stars out of a possible four:

It'due south kind of exhausting and kind of exhilarating. Information technology will appeal to the kinds of people you lot see in the Japanese animation section of the video shop, with their sleeves cut off so you can see their tattoos. And to those who subscribe to more than three film magazines. And to members of garage bands. And to art students. It's not for your average moviegoers—unless of course, they want to see something new.[5]

Stephen Holden of The New York Times said:

Fallen Angels is a densely packed suite of zany vignettes that have the autonomy of pop songs or stand-upwardly comic riffs, all stitched together with repetitive shots of elevated trains, underground subway stations and teeming neon-lit streets. Although the story takes a tragic turn, the motion picture feels equally weightless as the tinny pop music that keeps its restless midnight ramblers darting around the city like electronic toy figures in a gaming arcade.[6]

In the Hamlet Voice, J. Hoberman wrote:

The acme of neo-new-wavism, the ultimate in MTV alienation, the almost visually voluptuous flick of the fin de siècle, a pyrotechnical wonder most mystery, solitude, and the irrational beloved of movies that pushes Wong's style to the brink of self-parody.[7]

Hoberman and Amy Taubin both placed Fallen Angels on their lists for the superlative ten films of the decade while the Village Vocalisation 's decade-terminate critics poll placed Fallen Angels at No. 10, the highest-ranking of any Wong Kar-wai film.[eight]

The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported that 95% of critics have given the film a positive review based on 22 reviews, with an average rating of seven.ninety/10.[9] On Metacritic, the moving picture has a weighted average score of 71 out of 100 based on 13 critic reviews, indicating "more often than not favorable reviews".[x]

Box office [edit]

The film made HK$vii,476,025 during its Hong Kong run.

On 21 January 1998, the film began a limited North American theatrical run through Kino International, grossing US$xiii,804 in its opening weekend in one American theatre. The final North American theatrical gross was U.s.a.$163,145.

In 2004, Australian distribution visitor Accent Moving picture Entertainment released a remastered widescreen version of the film[11] enhanced for 16x9 screens.[12]

Home media & streaming [edit]

Kino International, who initially distributed the moving-picture show on DVD, prepared a re-release of the flick from a new loftier-definition transfer on 11 November 2008. Kino released the film on Blu-ray Disc in America in March 26, 2010. It has since gone out of print.[13]

The film was picked up by the Benchmark Collection and given a new Blu-ray release on March 23, 2021 in a collection of 7 Wong Kar-wai films.[14]

Also, Fallen Angels could previously exist streamed on FilmStruck (shut down in 2018) and is currently available on The Benchmark Collection subscription service channel. In May 2019, Wong Kar Wai announced that all of his films would be remastered by his production studio, Jet Tone Productions, and be distributed in the United States through Janus Films and the Criterion Collection. It was released in the United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland on DVD and Blu-ray by Artificial Eye.

Awards and nominations [edit]

Awards and nominations
Ceremony Category Recipient Outcome
15th Hong Kong Film Awards Best Film Fallen Angels Nominated
All-time Director Wong Kar-wai Nominated
Best Supporting Actress Karen Mok Won
Best New Performer Chan Man-lei Nominated
Best Cinematography Christopher Doyle Won
Best Film Editing William Chang, Wong Ming-lam Nominated
Best Art Management William Chang Nominated
Best Costume and Brand-up Blueprint William Chang Nominated
All-time Original Score Frankie Chan, Roel A. Garcia Won
32nd Golden Horse Awards Best Film Editing William Chang, Wong Ming-lam Won
Best Art Direction William Chang Nominated
Best Cinematography Christopher Doyle Nominated
Best Original Film Score Frankie Chan Nominated
2nd Hong Kong Film Critics Society Awards Film of Merit Fallen Angels Won
1st Golden Bauhinia Awards Best Film Fallen Angels Nominated
All-time Actor Takeshi Kaneshiro Nominated
Best Actress Michelle Reis Nominated
All-time Supporting Actor Chan Fai-hung Nominated
Best Supporting Extra Karen Mok Won
Charlie Yeung Nominated
Best Cinematography Christopher Doyle Won
Omega's About Creative Laurels Fallen Angels Nominated

Come across also [edit]

  • Cinema of Hong Kong
  • Hong Kong in films
  • Listing of Hong Kong films

References [edit]

  1. ^ "Fallen Angels". British Board of Motion picture Classification . Retrieved 14 Dec 2017.
  2. ^ Fallen Angels, Box Office Mojo, Retrieved 22 July 2011
  3. ^ BBFC. "Fallen Angels". www.bbfc.co.uk . Retrieved 28 Feb 2022.
  4. ^ Nochimson, Martha P., ed. (26 Jan 2016). A Companion to Wong Kar-wai (2016 ed.). West Sussex: John Wiley & Sons Ltd. p. 451. ISBN9781118424247 . Retrieved 7 May 2017.
  5. ^ Roger Ebert (19 June 1998). "Fallen Angels". Chicago Sun-Times . Retrieved 2 May 2020.
  6. ^ Holden, Stephen (7 Oct 1997). "Moving picture FESTIVAL REVIEW; Better a Broken Heart Than Shot in the Centre". The New York Times . Retrieved ii May 2020.
  7. ^ J. Hoberman (seven Baronial 2007). "Redeeming Feature". Hamlet Vocalisation. Archived from the original on 18 Baronial 2007. Retrieved 8 August 2007.
  8. ^ "The Best Films of the 1990s". Retrieved 28 October 2012.
  9. ^ "Fallen Angels (1995)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved 23 January 2022. {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  10. ^ "Fallen Angels Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved 23 January 2022. {{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  11. ^ "Emphasis Film Entertainment - FALLEN ANGELS". www.accentfilm.com. Archived from the original on 20 July 2008.
  12. ^ "Fallen Angels Blu-ray - Leon Lai".
  13. ^ "Fallen Angels Blu-ray (墮落天使 / Do lok tin si)".
  14. ^ "World of Wong Kar Wai Blu-ray Release Date March 23, 2021".

External links [edit]

  • Fallen Angels at IMDb
  • Fallen Angels at Rotten Tomatoes

gossexamated.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fallen_Angels_(1995_film)

0 Response to "Fallen Angels Movie Until We Meet Again"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel