Different sides of Hong Kong shown in Tran Anh Hungโ€™s critical flop I Come with the Rain



This is the latest instalment in a feature series reflecting on instances of East meets West in world cinema, including China-US co-productions.

Sometimes an outsiderโ€™s perspective can tell you more about a place than you might expect. This is especially true for Hong Kong โ€“ a city of endless comings and goings โ€“ and the filmmakers who chose it as a location.

Vietnamese-French director Tran Anh Hung made waves with his 1993 debut The Scent of Green Papaya, which won the Camรฉra dโ€™Or at Cannes Film Festival and was nominated for best foreign language film at the Oscars. His follow-up, 1995โ€™s Cyclo, co-starred Hong Kongโ€™s own Tony Leung Chiu-wai.
Having established himself on the world stage, Tran attracted some big names for his fourth film, the 2009 art-house thriller I Come with the Rain, which stars Josh Hartnett (Oppenheimer) alongside Japanese pop icon Takuya Kimura, South Korean star Lee Byung-hun and Hong Kongโ€™s Shawn Yue Man-lok.
Shot mostly in Hong Kong, the film joins outsider efforts such as Code 46 and Push โ€“ both by UK directors โ€“ in capturing something ineffable about the city.

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