Infernal Affairs VS. Infernal Affairs is far more efficient at conveying the same premise (cop/gangster vs. gangster/cop) but it runs mostly on its own energy, hardly every stopping to take in even the lowly likes of atmosphere, much less social context, two things Scorsese knows enough to include in the very fiber of the best movies he makes. While The Departed came away with four Academy awards for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, and Best Film Editing, Infernal Affairs was not even nominated for Best Foreign Picture. I prefer Infernal Affairs, but honestly, the best film of the trilogy might be part 2, which while a prequel, still pretty much requires seeing the first film to make sense of it. There is a constant question of good vs evil in Infernal Affairs, with the double act by the two characters creating a disconnect between law and morality. Infernal Affairs is a 2002 Hong Kong action thriller film directed by Andrew Lau and Alan Mak and written by Mak and Felix Chong.It tells the story of a police officer who infiltrates a Triad, and another officer secretly working for the same gang.It is the first in the Infernal Affairs series and is followed by Infernal Affairs II and Infernal Affairs III. Even though Infernal Affairs is the original, I feel the remake improves, on a lot of little things, like that, just adding more and more suspense, in comparison, aside from the ending, in which I like the original's a lot better. For his 2006 gangland thriller The Departed, the acclaimed American filmmaker turned to cult Hong Kong cop drama Infernal Affairs for inspiration. In Infernal Affairs Chen (the role of Billy Costigan in The Departed) is undercover in a matter of less than ten minutes with a series of flashbacks, voice over and a series of quick cuts and shoddily explained back-story. Original: the main character communicates with the only police officer who knows he is the mole via morse code. Yet what most distinguishes Infernal Affairs from The Departed is the recognition the two have received. 8 min read. The Departed focuses instead on characters, and seeks to situate them in their social context to help us understand their motivations. The main reason is because it was insanely praised by the media...when is complete garbage compared to the original. The Departed is considerably funnier though. I was flippin through the channels yesterday, and saw a trailer for a new filmed called The Departed (can't find it anywhere online yet), and I was like hey... this reminds me ALOT like the movie Infernal Affairs. Its pretty dang great, part 3 is sort of a wash though. An Intercultural Film Comparison *Spoiler alert* In 2002, directors Andrew Lau and Alan Mak released a cultural-defining film: Infernal Affairs. In 2007, when Scorsese finally won his decades-late Oscar, it was for The Departed, a remake of the 2002 Hong Kong crime thriller Infernal Affairs. The Departed VS Infernal Affairs.
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