WATCH YOUR FAVORITE
MOVIES & TV SERIES ONLINE
TRY FREE TRIAL
Home > Drama >

Infernal Affairs

Watch Infernal Affairs For Free

Infernal Affairs

Chan Wing Yan, a young police officer, has been sent undercover as a mole in the local mafia. Lau Kin Ming, a young mafia member, infiltrates the police force. Years later, their older counterparts, Chen Wing Yan and Inspector Lau Kin Ming, respectively, race against time to expose the mole within their midst.

... more
Release : 2004
Rating : 8
Studio : Media Asia Films, 
Crew : Art Direction,  Art Direction, 
Cast : Andy Lau Tony Leung Chiu-wai Anthony Wong Chau-Sang Eric Tsang Kelly Chen
Genre : Drama Action Thriller Crime Mystery

Cast List

Related Movies

The French Connection
The French Connection

The French Connection   1971

Release Date: 
1971

Rating: 7.7

genres: 
Action  /  Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Gene Hackman  /  Fernando Rey  /  Roy Scheider
Point Break
Point Break

Point Break   1991

Release Date: 
1991

Rating: 7.3

genres: 
Action  /  Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Patrick Swayze  /  Keanu Reeves  /  Gary Busey
Lonely Hearts
Lonely Hearts

Lonely Hearts   2006

Release Date: 
2006

Rating: 6.4

genres: 
Drama  /  Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
John Travolta  /  James Gandolfini  /  Jared Leto
Mission: Impossible
Mission: Impossible

Mission: Impossible   1996

Release Date: 
1996

Rating: 7.2

genres: 
Adventure  /  Action  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Tom Cruise  /  Jon Voight  /  Emmanuelle Béart
Mission: Impossible II
Mission: Impossible II

Mission: Impossible II   2000

Release Date: 
2000

Rating: 6.1

genres: 
Adventure  /  Action  /  Thriller
Stars: 
Tom Cruise  /  Dougray Scott  /  Thandiwe Newton
The Departed
The Departed

The Departed   2006

Release Date: 
2006

Rating: 8.5

genres: 
Drama  /  Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Leonardo DiCaprio  /  Matt Damon  /  Jack Nicholson
Miss Congeniality
Miss Congeniality

Miss Congeniality   2000

Release Date: 
2000

Rating: 6.3

genres: 
Action  /  Comedy  /  Crime
Stars: 
Sandra Bullock  /  Benjamin Bratt  /  Michael Caine
Miami Vice
Miami Vice

Miami Vice   2006

Release Date: 
2006

Rating: 6.1

genres: 
Action  /  Thriller  /  Crime
Stars: 
Jamie Foxx  /  Colin Farrell  /  Gong Li
Beverly Hills Cop
Beverly Hills Cop

Beverly Hills Cop   1984

Release Date: 
1984

Rating: 7.4

genres: 
Action  /  Comedy  /  Crime
Stars: 
Eddie Murphy  /  Judge Reinhold  /  John Ashton
Beverly Hills Cop II
Beverly Hills Cop II

Beverly Hills Cop II   1987

Release Date: 
1987

Rating: 6.5

genres: 
Action  /  Comedy  /  Crime
Stars: 
Eddie Murphy  /  Judge Reinhold  /  Jürgen Prochnow
Entrapment
Entrapment

Entrapment   1999

Release Date: 
1999

Rating: 6.3

genres: 
Drama  /  Mystery  /  Romance
Stars: 
Catherine Zeta-Jones  /  Sean Connery  /  Will Patton
Flying Dragon, Leaping Tiger
Flying Dragon, Leaping Tiger

Flying Dragon, Leaping Tiger   2002

Release Date: 
2002

Rating: 5.2

genres: 
Adventure  /  Action
Stars: 
Sammo Hung  /  Louis Fan Siu-Wong  /  Cheng Pei-pei

Reviews

Evengyny
2018/08/30

Thanks for the memories!

More
WasAnnon
2018/08/30

Slow pace in the most part of the movie.

More
Stevecorp
2018/08/30

Don't listen to the negative reviews

More
Philippa
2018/08/30

All of these films share one commonality, that being a kind of emotional center that humanizes a cast of monsters.

More
Takethispunch
2017/01/15

Infernal Affairs focuses on a police officer named Chen Wing-yan, who goes undercover into a triad, and a triad member Lau Kin-ming, who infiltrates the Hong Kong Police Force. Each mole has been planted by the rival organisation to gain an advantage in intelligence over the other side. The more the moles become involved in their undercover lives, the more issues they have to cope with.The prologue opens with the introduction of triad boss Hon Sam, who sends a number of young gangsters to the police academy as moles, among whom include a young Lau. Concurrently, a young Chen joins the police force but is seemingly expelled from the academy even though he manages to impress Superintendent Wong Chi-shing. In reality, Chen has become an undercover agent reporting only to Wong. Over the course of ten years, Chen experiences great stress from his undercover work while Lau quickly rises through the ranks in the police department. The film begins with a meeting between Chen and Lau in a hi-fi store without either of them knowing the other's identity.

More
Deigues
2016/02/28

"Infernal Affairs" is the Hong-Kong based crime movie that eventually led to the birth of the "The Departed" by Martin Scorsese. The film certainly has its own merits, but also its own faults. The story is centered on two moles: one of them infiltrates the mob and the other infiltrates the police force. When both parties become aware of the infiltration, a game of cat and mouse (or should I say mouse and mouse?) ensues, as each try to uncover the other one first.For the most part, "Infernal Affairs" relies on its strong and intriguing premise to keep the viewer hooked and succeeds. It's a competent crime film, but if you begin to scrape the surface it quickly gives in. While the two main characters are reasonably interesting, their love interests are extremely underdeveloped and lack any of the emotional depth of the characters in "The Departed". The direction is also far from brilliant. "Infernal Affairs" tries too hard to be stylish, cramming obnoxious fade-outs and pointless slow motion shots in many scenes. Still, I could have let all of this go, were it not for the most annoying fault of the entire film: an atrocious soundtrack, which isn't only incredibly cheesy, but intrusive as well. I admit I had seen Scorsese's remake prior to "Infernal Affairs" and, no matter how hard I tried not to compare the two, the superior work is obvious.If you are looking for a decent crime film, "Infernal Affairs" will meet most of your expectations. However, if you are hoping for something more, I strongly recommend Scorsese's version.

More
sharky_55
2015/09/26

Andy Lau and Tony Leung are two giants in Asian cinema and they play opposites in this cop thriller which pits two moles against each other in a complex hierarchy of modern Hong Kong. They are extremely prolific actors because they are capable, which is disappointing because the direction doesn't always allow for them to emote and fully display the gravity of their situation. When Superintendent Wong's lifeless body hurtles down onto the streets, the score instantly turns sentimental and we are treated to black and white flashbacks of their previous scenes, of that connection to Chan's old life instantly severed. But we must be emotionally manipulated into feeling this. When Lau's girlfriend discusses her novel's main character's morality, the score again turns from the tense percussion of the earlier scenes to this soft sentimental piano piece. Her description of this character who is supposedly a good person but who does bad things is so painfully unsubtle that it takes away from this great script. There's an early scene that allows Lau and Leung to display their talent, one that is not in Scorsese's Departed. A simple occurrence of a man buying a stereo allows us to roughly gauge what sort of person Chan is, before revealing he in fact works for the mob. And that stereo of course returns with significantly more important implications. Many of the segments of the script were directly lifted for Departed, and that is an indication of their importance, and their effectiveness. The thematic narrative is just as effective in dreary and gritty Hong Kong as it is in the Irish Catholic underbelly of Boston. There's the drug deal that is monitored from both sides, the respective moles relaying information that is delicately balanced and edited. It's a tense scene which the score better services, a heavy percussion backing over this plucked riff that seems strangely Egyptian, but it works. The tragic climax is also pretty much the same; with the unveiling of the secondary rat in the police department and this execution from Lau to tie up all lose ends and maintain his cover. I am intrigued by one of Scorsese's additions in making the mob boss a corrupt informant himself. Eric Tsang plays the triad leader in Infernal Affairs, and is unfortunately miscast (as he is a primarily comedic actor), too short and too jovial to really be menacing, although the breaking of the cast was a great moment which also served as a red herring of sorts. When Lau executes his former boss here, it's the culmination of his continued undercover life and realising that perhaps this act will lead to a promotion and a more comfortable life henceforth. When Damon does so in Departed, it's because he discovers that the man he is working for is in turn crooked, and his entire life's work and philosophy collapses onto itself. Both work just as well, as do their respective fates, although Nicholson proves to be the difference. We feel saddened by the tragic end of Chan, and the various ways in which his identity breaks down bit by bit. There is a flashback again as he discovers that Lau is the mole, but this one is integral and provides us with even more tension. Infernal Affair's script is a great one, and an original one, even if it's direction and visualisation is not entirely subtle. I am reminded of some better scenes in the film which utilise secondary characters (that are not Lau's placeholder girlfriend) to reinforce those themes of identity, morality and agency (as well as those Buddhist sentiments of rejecting destiny and fate introduced in the beginning). Are we really who we are if we cease to act in that way? Chan runs into an ex girlfriend while going for a massage, an inexplicable encounter, but her face shows only hints of recognition. She comforts her young daughter and talks of her marriage, things that are infinitely out of reach for Chan. Later, he is the sole person who witnesses the other mole's death, Keung, in a dramatic scene where the actor's face is visibly melting with condensation and he speaks on edge. It might be cliché to have someone utter such a confession before they die, but it's emotionally moving, because of the effective performance of that monologue, the yearning for a normal life that is mirrored in Chan's expression. In that penultimate meeting in the office, we agonise over the simple press of a button that erases a man's entire life. We know that Chan's life is over, a fact that he never is confronted with. Perhaps it is better that way.These moments are frustrating because they point to what could have been a great film if not for those over-dramatic death scenes, blatantly unsubtle exposition and unnecessary black and white flashbacks that connect the dots for the viewer as if they were a child. At that policeman's funeral, a teary Sum-Yee whispers to no one but the audience that she will dream of Chan just as he dreamt of her in those therapy sessions where they fell in love. Is this really necessary? But in saying that, we feel the same way for this fallen policeman.

More
Adam Peters
2015/02/07

(59%) A slick, well made, modern Hong Kong big-hitter that tells its tale of undercover law enforcement perfectly well. This really tries to be more than just another far-east action movie, with plenty of screen time for the characters to breath, while the main focus surrounds plot development rather than fights and action. As this does almost shy away form action, which clearly does add more depth, but it also marks this apart from the simpler, more strait-forward movies of this type, which might put some people off. But if you stick with it and put the effort in, then you're rewarded with a deeper, more complex beast than most cop thrillers from this part of the world.

More
Watch Instant, Get Started Now Watch Instant, Get Started Now