Lust, Caution
Se, jie
United States, China, Hong Kong, Taiwan
2007
157 Min
Color
Mandarin
Based on the revered short story by Chinese author Eileen Chang, ‘Lust, Caution’ (in Chinese "Desire, Danger’) stars Asian cinema icon Tony Leung, newcomers theater actress Tang Wei and Asian pop-star Wang Lee-Hom, by award-winning director Ang Lee (‘Brokeback Mountain’).
Shanghai, 1942. The Japanese occupation of China continues in force. Mrs. Mai, a woman of sophistication and means, walks into a café, places a phone call, and then sits and waits. She remembers how her story began several years earlier, in 1938 China.
She is not in fact Mrs. Mai, but shy Wang Jiazhi (Tang Wei). With WWII underway, Wang has been left behind by her father, who has escaped to England. As a freshman at university, she meets fellow student Kuang Yumin (Wang Lee-Hom). Kuang has started a drama society to shore up patriotism. As the theater troupe’s new leading lady, Wang realizes that she has found her calling, able to move and inspire audiences – and Kuang. He convenes a core group of students to carry out a radical and ambitious plan to assassinate a top Japanese collaborator, Mr. Yi (Tony Leung). Each student has a part to play; Wang will be Mrs. Mai, who will gain Yi’s trust by befriending his wife (Joan Chen) and then draw the man into an affair. Wang transforms herself utterly inside and out, and the scenario proceeds as scripted – until an unexpectedly fatal twist spurs her to flee.
Shanghai, 1941. With no end in sight for the occupation, Wang – having emigrated from Hong Kong – goes through the motions of her existence. Much to her surprise, Kuang re-enters her life. Now part of the organized resistance, he enlists her to again become Mrs. Mai in a revival of the plot to kill Yi, who as head of the collaborationist secret service has become even more a key part of the puppet government. As Wang reprises her earlier role, and is drawn ever closer to her dangerous prey, she finds her very identity being pushed to the limit…
Born in 1954 in Taipei, he graduated from the National Taiwan College of Arts in 1975 and then went to the United States, where he studied theater directing at the University of Illinois and film production at New York University. After winning awards in 1985 for his student work (while at N.Y.U., he also worked on Spike Lee’s acclaimed student film, Joe’s Bed-Stuy Barbershop: We Cut Heads), Lee spent the next six years working on screenplays, eventually making his directorial debut in 1992 with Pushing Hands. A comedy about the generational and cultural gaps in a Taiwanese family in New York, it won awards in Lee’s native country. His next film, The Wedding Banquet (1993), further explored cultural and generational differences through a gay New Yorker who stages a marriage of convenience to please his visiting Taiwanese parents. The film met with widespread acclaim, winning a Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival and a Best Director prize at the Seattle Film Festival, as well as… read more


In Roger Ebert’s review of Lust, Caution, he ended with the words, “Less sense, more sensibility”. Surely we know this is a reference to Ang Lee’s earlier work ‘Sense & Sensibility’ but it’s true… read review
Um melodrama romântico dos anos 1940, com toque de thriller de espionagem e temperado com cenas de sexo de fazer corar a platéia contemporânea. Isto, porém, não define totalmente DESEJO E PERIGO, filme… read review
I can’t stand American film distributors and how they handle foreign films. With their money-scheming minds, they give us movie trailers without any dialogue, trying their best to disguise the fact… read review
As much as it is a top-rate spy thriller, it is also a piercing portrayal of the inherent manipulation and power behind acts of love and sex – and I emphasize acts. This is a dark, brooding romance… read review