Infernal Affairs 2 (2003)
Facts
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Infernal Affairs 2 (Special Collector's Edition)
DVD Price: You save 13%! As of Oct 12 21:33 EDT (details)
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| Directed by | Siu Fai Mak and Wai-keung Lau |
| Cast | Anthony Wong Chau-Sang, Eric Tsang, Carina Lau, Francis Ng, Edison Chen and Roy Cheung |
| Theatrical Release | November 30, 2002 |
| DVD Release | February 13, 2007 |
| Running Time | 119 minutes |
| MPAA Rating | NR (Not Rated) |
| UPC Code | 796019799263 |
| Buy this item | $12.99 at Amazon.com As of Oct 12 21:33 EDT (details) 1 DVD, Weinstein Company, Usually ships in 24 hours, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC Languages: English (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), English (Original Language - Dolby Digital 2.0 Stereo), Thai (Original Language) Or 45 new from $6.99, 10 used from $6.97 |
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User Reviews
Average user review:| not bad, but not great either |
| Diabolically ambitious sequel |
With no Andy Lau or Tony Leung this time round, their younger selves played by the lacklustre Shawn Yue and Edison Chen are sidelined in favor of their superiors. It's a wise decision: Tsang and Francis Ng are superb, although curiously Anthony Wong isn't as good as in the original in a more expansive and more morally compromised role. The first half hour is awkward, but the deferred violence following the death of the local triad boss is well handled and the film fires into life with some genuinely great filmmaking once the consequences start catching up with the various characters.
The influence here is clearly the Godfather films, but whereas Godfather II was ultimately just a typical sequel exercise in underlining and escalation, this back story really does add layers to the original, with Eric Tsang becoming a genuinely tragic figure in his final scene. Where Godfather II tended to use history merely as a backdrop, here the handover of Hong Kong becomes an integral part of the film. The final montage of power being handed over from one nation to another, as police badges are replaced alongside criminals photos on the wall carries real weight and substance: it's what the film is all about - the loss of authority and the gaining of power. (Special praise to for Chan Kwong Wing's superb score.) Not as good as the original, true, but still very impressive indeed and miles ahead of Scorsese's bloated remake of the original.
January 18, 2007
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