“An immensely stylish affair... One may discern shades of Michael Mann’s Heat, an ambitious template but one which this movie... lives up to quite handsomely.”
Anthony Quinn, The Independent, 2004
This tale of two moles – a gangster (Andy Lau) posing as a cop, and a cop (Tony Leung) who has infiltrated the Triads – is a brisk, effective policier with moments of emotional complexity, such as the moving scene in which the cop who has sacrificed a decade of his life to undercover work gives a clandestine salute to the passing funeral procession of a colleague.
When the film was released in Hong Kong in late 2002, its success gave an unexpected boost to the down-in-the-dumps film industry. Two further instalments followed in 2003 – a prequel (Infernal Affairs II) and a sequel (Infernal Affairs III) – before Martin Scorsese remade it as The Departed (2006), with Matt Damon and Mark Wahlberg.
Not to be confused with Internal Affairs (1990), Mike Figgis’s equally dark and stylish take on police corruption.
Wu jian dao (2002)
Remade by Martin Scorsese as The Departed (2006), this is a sophisticated Hong Kong thriller about an undercover cop and his opposite number in the criminal fraternity.
- 2002 Hong Kong
- Directed by
- Andrew Lau Wai-keung, Alan Mak Siu-fai
- Produced by
- Andrew Lau Wai-keung
- Written by
- Alan Mak Siu-fai, Felix Chong Man Keung
- Featuring
- Tony Leung Chiu-wai, Andy Lau Tak-wah, Anthony Wong Chau-sang
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