Metacritic Film

Infernal Affairs

Starring Tony Leung, Andy Lau, Anthony Wong, Eric Tsang, Chapman To, Lam Ka Tung, Ng Ting Yip, and Wan Chi Keung

MPAA RATING: R for violence

Miramax Films
Action  |  Crime  |  Drama  |  Foreign  |  Suspense/Thriller
101 minutes | Color
Hong Kong
Released In Theaters September 24, 2004

A tightly wound thriller which centers on two Hong Kong police officers - one a gang mole on the force and the other an undercover cop in the gang - who share the same objectives and who find their destinies intertwined in this high-octane police actioner. (Miramax)

WRITTEN BY
Alan Mak
Felix Chong

DIRECTED BY
Andrew Lau
Alan Mak

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

75 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 San Francisco Chronicle G. Allen Johnson
Unfolds as a masterful chess match of wit and ingenuity, a cat-and-mouse chase of the highest order.
91 Entertainment Weekly
Dazzling psychological cat-and-mouse drama.
88 Rolling Stone
Throbs with action, suspense and a seductive rhythm all its own.
88 New York Daily News
The plot is intricate and tight. The preamble is a bit challenging to sort out. But the movie's engine is the relationships and the characters' inner lives, all of it boiling with emotional intensity.
88 Chicago Tribune
It's hard to breathe in Andrew Lau and Alan Mak's Infernal Affairs, a relentlessly taut Hong Kong cop thriller that, unlike many of its cinematic peers, doesn't burn off tension in choreographed action sequences.
80 Salon.com
One of the truest American gangster films of all time.
80 Chicago Reader
A runaway hit in Hong Kong, this 2002 crime thriller reinvigorated the genre with its airtight script, taut editing, and sleek cinematography.
80 Variety
Pic is superbly honed at both script and performance levels, with character taking precedence over action.
80 Village Voice
Spins in place with aplomb, generating exponentially more vertiginous doublings with each sweaty-palmed set piece.
80 The Hollywood Reporter Andrew Sun
Driven by two great performances surrounded by solid supporting acts, Infernal Affairs is the rare testosterone movie that is also mature and thoughtful.
75 Premiere
This is a real grabber.
75 Chicago Sun-Times
The movie pays off in a kind of emotional complexity rarely seen in crime movies.
75 New York Post
Overflows with psychological intrigue, something often missing from such offerings.
75 USA Today
Viewers who like clean storytelling may not be happy. Those who savor ironic wrap-ups will be.
75 The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
Here is a psychological twister with an implausible and hard-to-follow plot. All of this is more than compensated for by terrific performances, a seductive colour palette that is greenish and glassy, and a minimalist style reminiscent of Michael Mann.
70 Newsweek
Expect to be confused for 10 minutes. Then sit back and enjoy the ride.
70 The New York Times
The sophistication of the stylized minimalism here in Infernal Affairs is dazzling.
60 TV Guide
It should come as no surprise that there's an American remake in the works, starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Matt Damon and directed by Martin Scorsese.
40 The New Yorker
The directors, Andrew Lau and Alan Mak, manage to convince us that we have witnessed an action movie, although in fact the quantity of violence is so minimal that, under Hong Kong law, Infernal Affairs barely qualifies as a motion picture.

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