2046 By Wong Kar-wai (2025)
You don’t watch 2046 for plot. You watch it for the feeling of missing someone you haven’t lost yet, or holding onto a love that already left ten years ago. It’s a film about the stories we tell ourselves so we don’t have to say: I’m still not over it.
Chow Mo-wan, now a pulp writer and a rougher-edged womanizer, moves between memory and invention. In the “real” 1960s Hong Kong, he flirts with a series of women: the stoic gambling queen Bai Ling (Zhang Ziyi), the sweet but unavailable Jing-wen (Faye Wong), and echoes of his lost love, Mrs. Chan (Maggie Cheung, glimpsed in flashback). In the “future” 2046, he writes a story about a train leaving for a place where lost souls try to recapture lost love.
★★★★½ (or, 10/10 sad train rides) 2046 by wong kar-wai
Released in 2004 as the spiritual (and chronological) sequel to In the Mood for Love (2000), 2046 is a film about longing that can’t find its shape. It takes the same character, the same hotel room (2046/2047), the same haunted restraint, and pushes it into sci-fi, melodrama, and future-noir. It shouldn’t work. It does.
In the Mood for Love , Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind , Chungking Express , crying in the dark. You don’t watch 2046 for plot
Zhang Ziyi’s Bai Ling steals the film. She plays a woman who gives herself entirely to Chow, knowing he won’t give back. The Christmas Eve scene—where she waits, dresses up, then silently destroys the room—is as raw as anything Wong has ever filmed.
film, Wong Kar-wai, Hong Kong cinema, romance, memory There’s a moment about halfway through 2046 when Chow Mo-wan (Tony Leung) sits in a dim noodle shop, narrating: “In the year 2046, nothing changes. No one knows if that’s true or not, because no one who ever went there has come back… except one.” Chow Mo-wan, now a pulp writer and a
Christopher Doyle’s cinematography (along with Kwan Pun Leung and Yiu-Fai Lai) is lush, claustrophobic, and drenched in jewel tones—emerald greens, deep crimsons, electric blues. Rain on taxi windows. Cigarette smoke curling like a second thought. Slow-motion embraces that last one second too long. Every frame feels like a sigh.
Where In the Mood for Love was about what was almost said, 2046 is about what’s said too late, or to the wrong person. Chow claims he’s moved on. He hasn’t. He pays other women to pretend, he writes stories where robots cry, he laughs at love while composing elegies to it.
That “except one” is the hook—and the heartbreak—of Wong Kar-wai’s aching, gorgeous, and deliberately frustrating masterpiece.
Here’s a draft blog post about Wong Kar-wai’s 2046 . You can adjust the tone (more personal, more analytical, shorter/longer) as you like. Lost in Translation, Lost in Time: Wong Kar-wai’s 2046