Fallen Angels
Wong Kar-Wai was once compared to Godard and Tarantino - and Filmasia presents one of the masterpieces from his most prolific creative period, the first half of the 1990s.
Fallen Angels follows several characters who meet only rarely, yet we find numerous parallels between them: a hired killer who likes to have his work planned by someone else; his companion obsessed with the killer's personality, despite having barely seen him; a mute young man who occupies other people's shops at night; and a girl longing to meet the woman who seduced her ex-boyfriend. The fragmented narrative relies more on internal monologues than dialogue.
The film ranks among Wong's most stylistically distinctive works - the camera alternates between color and black-and-white images, most scenes are shot with a handheld camera using an extremely wide lens that distorts the image, and the soundtrack is influenced by trip-hop. Wong himself stated that the city itself is the film's main character and that it is a kind of cinematic sibling to his earlier work Chungking Express.











