Chungking Express Movie Review
Chungking Express Review
"Chungking Express" Overview

Rating: PG-13
1994
Cast and Crew
Director : Wong Kar WaiProducer : Chan Yi-kan
Screenwiter : Wong Kar Wai
Starring : Brigitte Lin,Tony Leung,Faye Wong,Takeshi Kaneshiro,Valerie Chow
If Happy Together and In the Mood for Love are director Wong Kar Wai's Hong Kong art
house ballads, Chungking Express is his smash-hit pop song -- light and fun with a hint
of truth. While the two former films explore relationships to their innermost depths, Ex
press flirts with the nostalgic grief and forlorn desperation in finding and losing love
through its individual characters. But what it lacks in thematic depth it makes up
for in charisma and honesty.
Chungking Express offers two parallel stories of love and loss brought together by a dine-and-dash
eatery. In the first half of the film, a detective (Takeshi Kaneshiro) stops in at
the local greasy food dive while pining over his lost love. And in the second half,
a beat street cop (Tony Leung) stops in while also pining over his lost love. Although
Kaneshiro's desperation and tragic romanticism sparks our interest in the first story
of the film, it's the second story that really captures our attention. The power
of that second story line comes from Faye Wong, who invades the screen (and Tony Leung's)
apartment with childish charm and an obsession with the Mama's and Papa's "California
Dreaming."
While Wong is the stand-out star, as her infatuation with Leung sends her sneaking
into his apartment to redecorate, Chungking Express truly succeeds because it romanticizes
post-relationship pain. We see Kaneshiro calling old girlfriends in an act of lonely
desperation and Leung's assumption that his ex-girlfriend is redecorating his apartment,
and we can relate to the futility of holding out hope that there's still a chance. Yet
the depressing weight of the melodramatic is kept at bay by Wong Kar Wai's humor
-- such as when Kaneshiro is buying and eating expired cans of pineapple or Leung
is personifying his household items such as a crying dish rag or thinning bar of
soap.
Where Wong Kar Wai's later works have a steady hand and clear vision, Chungking Express
rushes by with Wong's hand-held camera in tow. The slow-motion shots flash, chasing
Kaneshiro through crowded Hong Kong streets, and the free-roaming camera follows
Faye Wong through the cramped corners of Leung's apartment. Shot and edited in two
months during a break in the filming of Ashes of Time, Express was a way of clearing the cobwebs
while he edited the martial arts epic, and its guerilla shooting style shows. But
its rapid pace keeps the stories from wearing out their welcome.
Like the Faye Wong cover of The Cranberries "Dreams," the poppy Chungking Express offers
enough to relate to without letting the plot lines linger. Showing a person's loneliness
in the relationship aftermath lets us connect on a superficial level, without having
to plunder the depths of that relationship pain. And Express is better for it. Although
it lacks the depth of Wong's other works, Chungking Express prefers a smile to a frown.
Aka Chung Hing sam lam.
Reviewer: Jason Morgan




