MUBI brings you a great new film every day.  Start your 7-day free trial today!
Watch a new film every day for $4.99.
Try MUBI for FREE.
 

Everlasting Regret

Chang hen ge

Hong Kong, China

2005

115 Min
Color
1.85:1
Mandarin
  • Currently 2.9/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

   |   

DIR Stanley Kwan

EXEC Jackie Chan, Albert Yeung, Hu Jinjun, Qu Guanghui, Ren Zhong-lun

PROD Willie Chan, Chen Baoping, Fang Jun, Pengle Xu

SCR Wang Anyi, Elmond Yeung

DP Huang Lian

CAST Sammi Cheng, Tony Leung Ka Fai, Daniel Wu, Hu Jun, Huang Yi, Su Yan, Huang Jue, Cheng Haofeng

ED William Chang

PROD DES William Chang

Synopsis

A person’s life is destined to be shorter than that of a city. Having spent her whole life in Shanghai, Qiyao has her moments of prosperity and her fair share of loneliness. She finally fades and disappears but Shanghai remains a metropolitan city. Shanghai in the 1930s is glamorous and seductive. A pretty young girl from an ordinary family, Qiyao is lucky enough to win the 2nd runner-up of the “Miss Shanghai” contest. Mr. Cheng, her admirer as well as a photographer who assists her to her success, knows the girl is going to live an extraordinary life. It turns out she is going to witness the decades of changes to her city. 1948, Officer Li, an official in control of the army, keeps her as his lover. During the time, she spends her life at the Parliament ballroom, accompanies him through dangerous situations, and tries to devote all of herself to a man she believes she can spend the rest of her life with. But one day, he disappears and does not return. She never gets to find out the reason for his disappearance. This happens often in Shanghai at the time. In 1956, Qiyao begins to live a plain and simple life that is totally different from her glorious days. Nobody knows her past and she appears to be a young single woman. Her only friend is the married Mr. Cheng whom she keeps at a distance. But the calmness is broken when a rich young man Ming shows up. Qiyao is satisfied with Ming in every way except for his lack of courage as a man. When Qiyao finally makes a decision to marry him, Ming leaves her and goes to Hong Kong for his family business. Qiyao is alone again, but with an unborn child. She marries a sick and dying man, simply to find her child a father. Mr. Cheng is the only person who understands that she does it to regain her dignity. In 1970, grateful that the divorced Mr. Cheng has never stopped loving her, Qiyao tries to get closer to him and wants to marry him. Mr. Cheng, however, devotes himself to popular campaign that sends educated urban men to the countryside to help the rural population. He leaves for Yunnan, thinking that it will only be a year, but does not come back until ten years later. One day, Mr. Cheng returns, introducing to Qiyao a young man who is addicted to the lifestyle of old Shanghai. Regardless of the age difference, Qiyao and the young man fall in love with each other. Unfortunately, the young man secretly plans to go abroad, leaving Qiyao alone in Shanghai, just as what his predecessors have done. Qiyao finally breaks down as she realizes no one is as loyal as she is to the city where her life begins and will end. —IMDb

Director

Original

Stanley Kwan

Stanley Kwan (simplified Chinese: 关锦鹏; traditional Chinese: 關錦鵬; Mandarin Pinyin: Guān Jǐnpéng; Jyutping: Kwan1 Kam2 Pang4; born October 9, 1957 in Hong Kong) is a Hong Kong Chinese film director and producer.

Kwan landed a job at the TVB after receiving a mass communications degree at Hong Kong Baptist College. Kwan’s first film was Women (1985), which starred Chow Yun-fat, and was a big box-office success.

Kwan’s films often deal sympathetically with the plight of women and their struggles with romantic affairs of the heart. Rouge (1987), Full Moon in New York (1989), Centre Stage (1992; aka Actress), a biopic on silent film star Ruan Lingyu and Everlasting Regret (2005), are all such typical Kwan films. Red Rose White Rose (1994) is an adaptation of an Eileen Chang novel.

Kwan came out as a gay man in 1996 in Yang ± Yin, his documentary looking at the history of Chinese-language film through… read more

Wall

Displaying 0 wall posts.

Related Films

Fans

Displaying 1 of 1 fans.

Articles

Our roundup of essays and articles on this film.

TIFF Report: Everlasting Regret Review

By Twitchfilm.com on June 4, 2011
Watching the life and struggles of Qiyao [Sammi Cheng] unfold over 34 years in Stanley Kwan’s Everlasting Regret was kind of like watching paint dry. It is long and boring and by the time it dries you
read on Twitchfilm.com

Lists

Displaying 2 of 2 lists.

Reviews

No reviews yet — Write the first

Forum

Displaying 0 discussion topics.