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Infernal Affairs (2002) / The departed (2006)
"Infernal Affairs is a gripping thriller with grandstanding drama, muscle-clenching suspense and two great action leads in Tony Leung and Andy Lau."
Tony Leung, one of the most sympathetic, attractive presences in Asian cinema, plays Yan: for 10 years, he has been a deep-cover police mole in the triads, immersed in their culture for his entire adult life, and certainly long enough to endure a hellish crisis of identity.
But there is a triad mole in the police. Andy Lau plays Ming, a cadet from Yan's graduating class, who secretly reports to Sam, sabotaging all the police swoops on Sam's cocaine deliveries. And when the police suspect a mole in their ranks, it is Ming who is approached by the Internal Affairs bureau to find the culprit. This natural born killer embarks on some character-assassination: suggesting that it is Supt Wong who is the corrupt cop.
The two men meet face to face at the very beginning and end of the picture: when Ming buys some stereo speakers from Yan, at one of Sam's "front" businesses - and then in the thrilling rooftop finale.
This movie carries the DNA of undercover thrillers like Serpico, French Connection, Donnie Brasco, and the dual influence of Ricky Lam's City on Fire and Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs. But the emphasis contrived by director Andrew Lau and screenwriter and co-director Alan Mak is not on violence but on the cat-and-mouse business of outsmarting the enemy and the paranoia of not knowing who the enemy is - within and without - and not knowing how far to push any victory without compromising your inside source.
Yan and Ming come from backgrounds in which serious self-examination and self-knowledge are as impossible as unaided human flight - witness Yan dozing on the analyst's couch - but they are nevertheless creepingly aware that they have each built secret careers betraying the people with whom they have grown up. More importantly, they are aware of each other; the existence of each is a mirror in which they glimpse their own life-long anxiety and deceit.
Film combines exhilarating action with liquid-nitrogen existential cool, gleaming and shimmering with the city's glass and steel. When going to the movies can seem like a pretty earnest business, it's good to have one that gets you hugging yourself with excitement.
https://www.theguardian.com/film/2004/feb/27/dvdreviews.shopping1
- Release date: September 24, 2004 (USA)
The story follows two moles operating on opposite sides of the law:
Chan Wing-yan (Tony Leung): An undercover police officer who has spent ten years infiltrating a powerful Triad led by the ruthless Hon Sam. Over a decade of living as a criminal has left him psychologically fractured, with his only link to his true identity being his handler, Superintendent Wong.
Lau Kin-ming (Andy Lau): A Triad member who was sent into the police force as a young mole. A decade later, he has risen to become a Senior Inspector in the Internal Affairs department. He enjoys his respected status and begins to desire a "clean" life, though he remains tethered to Hon Sam.
The conflict ignites when both the police and the Triads realize they have a mole in their midst. The two protagonists are tasked with finding "the spy"—which essentially means they are hunting for each other, and in some ways, themselves
- Release date: September 24, 2004 (USA)
The story follows two moles operating on opposite sides of the law:
Chan Wing-yan (Tony Leung): An undercover police officer who has spent ten years infiltrating a powerful Triad led by the ruthless Hon Sam. Over a decade of living as a criminal has left him psychologically fractured, with his only link to his true identity being his handler, Superintendent Wong.
Lau Kin-ming (Andy Lau): A Triad member who was sent into the police force as a young mole. A decade later, he has risen to become a Senior Inspector in the Internal Affairs department. He enjoys his respected status and begins to desire a "clean" life, though he remains tethered to Hon Sam.
The conflict ignites when both the police and the Triads realize they have a mole in their midst. The two protagonists are tasked with finding "the spy"—which essentially means they are hunting for each other, and in some ways, themselves
Key Differences from The Departed
While the 2006 remake is highly regarded, the original 2002 film has distinct characteristics:
Pacing: Infernal Affairs is a lean 100 minutes, moving with clinical efficiency compared to Scorsese's 150-minute epic.
Violence: The original is notably less graphic. It relies on suspense, cell phone logistics, and "the gaze" rather than gunfights and gore.
Ending: The Hong Kong original features a more philosophical and tragic ending regarding the nature of justice and survival, whereas the American version leans into a more definitive, retributive conclusion.
The Departed (2006)
- Most of Martin Scorsese's films have been about men trying to realize their inner image of themselves. That's as true of Travis Bickle as of Jake LaMotta, Rupert Pupkin, Howard Hughes, the Dalai Lama, Bob Dylan or, for that matter, Jesus Christ.
- "The Departed" is about two men trying to live public lives that are the radical opposites of their inner realities. Their attempts threaten to destroy them, either by implosion or fatal betrayal. The telling of their stories involves a moral labyrinth, in which good and evil wear each other's masks.
- The story is inspired by "Infernal Affairs" (2002) by Alan Mak and Andrew Lau, the most successful Hong Kong film of recent years.What makes this a Scorsese film, and not merely a retread, is the director's use of actors, locations and energy, and its buried theme. I am fond of saying that a movie is not about what it's about; it's about how it's about it. That's always true of a Scorsese film.
- Matt Damon is Colin Sullivan, the kid spotted in that soda fountain by mob boss Frank Costello (Jack Nicholson). He enlists in the state police after Costello handpicks him so many years before as a promising spy.
- Leonardo DiCaprio is Billy Costigan, an ace police cadet who is sent undercover by Capt. Queenan (Martin Sheen) to infiltrate Costello's gang. Both men succeed with their fraudulent identities; Colin rises in the force, and Billy rises in the mob.
- Ingenious additional layers of this double-blind are added by the modern devices of cell phones and computers. When the paths of the two undercover men cross, as they must, will they eventually end up on either end of the same phone call?
- When the cops suspect they have an informer in their midst, what if they assign the informer to find himself? The traps and betrayals of the undercover life are dramatized in one of my favorite moments, when one of the characters is told, "I gave you the wrong address. But you went to the right one."
While the 2006 remake is highly regarded, the original 2002 film has distinct characteristics:
Pacing: Infernal Affairs is a lean 100 minutes, moving with clinical efficiency compared to Scorsese's 150-minute epic.
Violence: The original is notably less graphic. It relies on suspense, cell phone logistics, and "the gaze" rather than gunfights and gore.
Ending: The Hong Kong original features a more philosophical and tragic ending regarding the nature of justice and survival, whereas the American version leans into a more definitive, retributive conclusion.
The Departed (2006)
- Most of Martin Scorsese's films have been about men trying to realize their inner image of themselves. That's as true of Travis Bickle as of Jake LaMotta, Rupert Pupkin, Howard Hughes, the Dalai Lama, Bob Dylan or, for that matter, Jesus Christ.
- "The Departed" is about two men trying to live public lives that are the radical opposites of their inner realities. Their attempts threaten to destroy them, either by implosion or fatal betrayal. The telling of their stories involves a moral labyrinth, in which good and evil wear each other's masks.
- The story is inspired by "Infernal Affairs" (2002) by Alan Mak and Andrew Lau, the most successful Hong Kong film of recent years.What makes this a Scorsese film, and not merely a retread, is the director's use of actors, locations and energy, and its buried theme. I am fond of saying that a movie is not about what it's about; it's about how it's about it. That's always true of a Scorsese film.
- Matt Damon is Colin Sullivan, the kid spotted in that soda fountain by mob boss Frank Costello (Jack Nicholson). He enlists in the state police after Costello handpicks him so many years before as a promising spy.
- Leonardo DiCaprio is Billy Costigan, an ace police cadet who is sent undercover by Capt. Queenan (Martin Sheen) to infiltrate Costello's gang. Both men succeed with their fraudulent identities; Colin rises in the force, and Billy rises in the mob.
- Ingenious additional layers of this double-blind are added by the modern devices of cell phones and computers. When the paths of the two undercover men cross, as they must, will they eventually end up on either end of the same phone call?
- When the cops suspect they have an informer in their midst, what if they assign the informer to find himself? The traps and betrayals of the undercover life are dramatized in one of my favorite moments, when one of the characters is told, "I gave you the wrong address. But you went to the right one."
- Release date: October 6, 2006 (USA)Director: Martin ScorseseMusic by: Howard ShoreAdapted from: Infernal Affairs IIAwards: Academy Award for Best Picture, MORE
- Release date: October 6, 2006 (USA)Director: Martin ScorseseMusic by: Howard ShoreAdapted from: Infernal Affairs IIAwards: Academy Award for Best Picture, MORE
The film follows two "moles" on opposite sides of the law who are tasked with infiltrating the enemy while trying to uncover each other’s identity.
Colin Sullivan (Matt Damon): Groomed since childhood by Irish mob boss Frank Costello, Sullivan becomes a rising star in the Massachusetts State Police (MSP). He serves as Costello’s "rat" within the Special Investigation Unit, leaking police secrets to keep the mob one step ahead.
Billy Costigan (Leonardo DiCaprio): A recruit with a criminal family background, Costigan is selected by Captain Queenan (Martin Sheen) and Sgt. Dignam (Mark Wahlberg) to go deep undercover. He infiltrates Costello’s inner circle, living a life of constant paranoia and violence to gather evidence for the police.
The tension peaks when both organizations realize they have a traitor in their midst. The two men enter a desperate race to identify the other before their own covers are blown, leading to a series of violent betrayals and a notoriously nihilistic climax.
Critical Reception & Awards
The Departed was a major triumph at the 79th Academy Awards, finally winning Martin Scorsese his first (and only) Oscar for Best Director.
Major Awards:
Best Picture (Winner)
Best Director – Martin Scorsese (Winner)
Best Adapted Screenplay – William Monahan (Winner)
Best Film Editing – Thelma Schoonmaker (Winner)
Best Supporting Actor – Mark Wahlberg (Nomination)
Critics praised the film for its breakneck pacing, sharp dialogue, and the high-energy performances of its ensemble cast. While some fans of the original Infernal Affairs found the remake more "operatic" and less subtle, most agreed that Scorsese successfully translated the story into a uniquely American gritty epic.
Production Trivia
Real-Life Inspiration: The character of Frank Costello was loosely based on the real-life Boston gangster Whitey Bulger, while Colin Sullivan was inspired by corrupt FBI agent John Connolly.
Nicholson’s Improvisation: Jack Nicholson famously improvised many of his scenes to keep his co-stars (especially DiCaprio) genuinely on edge. This included the use of a real prop gun during the "interrogation" scene.
Setting: While set in Boston, much of the film was actually shot in New York City due to tax incentives at the time, though the production made extensive use of Boston landmarks for exterior shots.
- Filmmaker Joe Berlinger examines the story of South Boston crime boss Whitey Bulger, including his sensational trial. Key players every side reveal Bulger's influence on crime and law enforcement.
- Initial release: January 18, 2014
- Initial release: January 18, 2014




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