Days of Being Wild

Sun Jan 5 - Fri Jan 31
Wong Kar Wai’s breakthrough sophomore feature represents the first full flowering of his swooning signature style.
Sun Jan 5
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Fri Jan 31

Wong Kar Wai’s breakthrough sophomore feature represents the first full flowering of his swooning signature style. The first film in a loosely connected, ongoing cycle that includes In the Mood for Love and 2046, this ravishing existential reverie is a dreamlike drift through the Hong Kong of the 1960s in which a band of wayward twenty-somethings—including a disaffected playboy (Leslie Cheung) searching for his birth mother, a lovelorn woman (Maggie Cheung) hopelessly enamored with him, and a policeman (Andy Lau) caught in the middle of their turbulent relationship—pull together and push apart in a cycle of frustrated desire. The director’s inaugural collaboration with cinematographer Christopher Doyle, who lends the film its gorgeously gauzy, hallucinatory texture, and actor Tony Leung, who appears briefly in a tantalizing teaser for a never-realized sequel, Days of Being Wild is an exhilarating first expression of Wong’s trademark themes of time, longing, dislocation, and the restless search for human connection. 
 
Fun fact: Leslie Cheung was so proud of his work in Days of Being Wild that, despite plans to retire from acting, he decided to star in Wong’s next film, Ashes of Time

Director
Wong Kai Wai
Duration
95 min
Year
1990
Country
Hong Kong