Release Date : May 9, 2007 Limited Genre Movie :Drama,Art House & International,Comedy
Mpaa Rating : Unrated
Actors :Kang-sheng Lee,Shiang-chyi Chen,Norman Bin Atun,Pearlly Chua,Pearly Chua
A homeless Chinese itinerant is attacked by thugs in Kuala Lampur, only to fall in with a group of kind but curious Bangladeshi men and other fascinating denizens of the smog-soaked city in director Tsai Ming-liang's minimalist mediation on contemporary life in the Malaysian capitol. Hsiao-kang (Lee Kang-sheng) has been injured in a brutal street attack, and after being brought to the crumpling abode of a group of Bangladeshi men, he is nursed back to help on the musty mattress of his benevolent rescuer Rawang (Norman Bin Atun). Upon gaining the strength to venture out on his own, Hsaio-kang makes the acquaintance of pretty Chinatown waitress Chyi (Chen Siang-chyi) - who currently works and lives with her female boss (Pearlly Chua). In another part of the city, a paralyzed man (also played by Lee) is tended to by a team of nurses before being moved from the hospital to the women's tenement. When a toxic fog descends upon the city and the citizens are sent running for cover, Hsaio-kang finds his already complicated relationship with his three new acquaintances taking on a whole new, and decidedly surreal, dimension. ~ Jason Buchanan, Rovi
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User Ranting Movie I Don't Want to Sleep Alone (Hei yan quan) : 3.6User Percentage For I Don't Want to Sleep Alone (Hei yan quan) : 71 %
User Count Like for I Don't Want to Sleep Alone (Hei yan quan) : 3,012
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The hormones here don't rage so much as unfurl over two exquisite hours.Wesley Morris-Boston Globe
For Tsai's fans, Sleep offers many pleasures, including a heightened attention to nocturnal beauty and a gorgeous, uncharacteristic surrealism.
Ben Kenigsberg-Time Out
I Don't Want to Sleep Alone is a title to keep in mind while absorbing this allusive, humid mood piece.
Bill Stamets-Chicago Sun-Times
A serious return to creative form and a renewal of focus; there's a sense that every perfectly timed slow take and studied composition serves a purpose. And not a single melon gets shtupped.
David Fear-Time Out New York
I Don't Want to Sleep Alone is emotional in what it says about the need for connections, religious in what it asks about the universe.
John Anderson-Newsday
In I Don't Want to Sleep Alone, Kuala Lumpur is a city of smoky alleyways and empty, half-lighted streets, where a few solitary, sad-looking souls stand out from the crowds.
A.O. Scott-New York Times
A gorgeous film that won't disappoint.
Dennis Schwartz-Ozus' World Movie Reviews
Tsai's style is essentially written in stone at this point, and [this] hardly challenges it. [He] is as visually adept here as ever, right up to the film's peaceful final shot.
Jeremy Heilman-MovieMartyr.com
A subtle, slow-moving presentation of hope and responsibility that will test your patience if you are not a fan of elliptical, dreamlike narratives like those in Tsai's films.
Michele Kenner-Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Music interlaces the action, which proceeds mostly without words, expression or, regrettably, interest.
Anthony Quinn-Independent
Working from a sombre palette and with little to no dialogue, Tsai crafts a dazed fantasy about companionship and its power to revivify.
Tim Robey-Daily Telegraph
Spare an evening, if you feel adventurous.
Nigel Andrews-Financial Times
Directors who come up with films with "sleep" in the title shouldn't be this dull if they don't want glib comments made about them. Yes, I Don't Want To Sleep Alone is a snooze-fest.
Sam Jordison-Film4
While not as erotic as other films by this director, there's a languid sensuality to the story.
Wendy Ide-Times [UK]
This mostly wordless saga is striking but slight.
David Parkinson-Empire Magazine
Tsai's long, static, near-wordless takes may try the patience of some, but fans will be enchanted by his new-found warmth.
Philip Kemp-Total Film
from the most prosaic of foundations, Tsai has erected a somnolent reverie on alienation, desire and restlessness.
Anton Bitel-Eye for Film
An enigmatic fable of longing and loneliness in present-day Kuala Lumpur.
Tom Dawson-BBC
If it is sometimes confusing sifting through the characters drifting throughthe Malaysian nights, I Don't Want to Sleep Alone is nonetheless successfulin creating a mood that lingers.
Laura Clifford-Reeling Reviews
It's a return to the dreamy style of Tsai's studies in urban alienation and social disconnection, in which feelings often are suppressed and words are rarely spoken...
Sean Axmaker-Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Tsai's drama is something like a mixture of Robert Bresson and R.W. Fassbinder, as God's bedraggled souls struggle with the desires of the damned, and nobody wants to go into that good night alone.
Marjorie Baumgarten-Austin Chronicle
It takes some careful attention and a not insignificant amount of patience, but if you can modify your expectations accordingly, Sleep is a highly rewarding experience.
Josh Bell-Las Vegas Weekly
The film ends so beautifully that it's easy to forgive the dead passages that preceded it and hope it carries over into his next movie.
Scott Tobias-AV Club
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Movie Overview For I Don't Want to Sleep Alone (Hei yan quan)
Forest fires burn in Sumatra; a smoke covers Kuala Lumpur. Grifters beat an immigrant day laborer and leave him on the streets. Rawang, a young man, finds him, carries him home, cares for him, and sleeps next to him. In a loft above lives a waitress. She sometimes provides care and attention. More violence seems a constant possibility. They find another man abandoned on the street, paralyzed. They carry him. While no one speaks to each other, sounds dominate: coughing, cooking, coupling, opening bags; music and news reports on a radio, the rattle and buzz of a restaurant. It's dark in the city at night. We see down hallways, through doors, down alleys. Who sleeps with whom?TagLine I Don't Want to Sleep Alone (Hei yan quan)


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