End Of Love

Following his mother’s death, Ming, a good-looking gay man, moves out of their shared apartment and rents a room owned by Cyrus. His new landlord is an extravagant young man who seems to be swimming in money. Not appearing to need to work, he spends his time taking drugs and partying. Cyrus introduces Ming to his world and, before long, Ming agrees to work as a rent boy, like Cyrus. A turbulent time commences in which the two colleagues and business partners have a great deal of fun. Ming nonetheless tries to keep his new source of cash hidden from his lover, Yan. Ming’s inamorato Yan is ten years his senior; he would never tolerate Ming’s occupation. The two men met in the fashion industry where Ming was once employed. It was love at first sight. But one day Ming’s mother caught them having sex. This led to a terrible row, after which Ming’s mother took her own life. Although Yan swore at the time he would never see Ming again, they ended up resuming their affair – even more passionately than before. Waking up in hospital following a drug overdose, Ming admits his drug escapades and his lucrative source of extra income to Yan. If Yan truly loves him, says Ming, he will accept his transgressions. This is really too much for Yan. But they nonetheless resume their love affair. Unable to cope with Ming’s new lifestyle Yan decides to tip off the police about Cyrus – but Ming is one of those arrested during the raid. Thanks to the support of another prisoner named Keung, Ming manages to survive the terrible prison sentence. When Ming finishes his sentence, Keung meets him from prison. Ming moves in with Keung, who, it transpires, does not live alone …
The director Simon Chung reflects upon his second feature: “The main character in the film, Ming, is based on the experiences of a friend of mine, a part-time male prostitute who attempts to balance his job with his love life. The film is not a social-realist drama documenting the plight of gay prostitutes, rather it utilises the main character's profession to explore issues such as love, drugs, sex, fidelity and morality.”

details

  • Runtime

    95 min
  • Country

    Hong Kong, China
  • Year of Presentation

    2009
  • Year of Production

    2008
  • Director

    Simon Chung
  • Cast

    Lee Chi Kin, Ben Yeung (Yeung Sheung Wun), Guthrie Yip, Joman Chiang, Clifton Kwan
  • Production Company

    Heart Productions
  • Berlinale Section

    Panorama
  • Berlinale Category

    Feature Film

Biography Simon Chung


Simon Chung Tak Sing, is a Hong Kong film director. His films include Innocent, released in 2005, End of Love which premiered at the 59th Berlin International Film Festival in 2009, and Speechless, released in 2012, and which premiered at the BFI 26th London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival (since renamed BFI Flare: London LGBT Film Festival), on 28 March 2012. Chung personally identifies as gay.

Chung was born and brought up in Hong Kong, and from the age of fifteen, in the city of Toronto in Canada, where he attended high school. He was later educated at York University in Toronto, where he majored in Film, followed by Hong Kong Baptist University, in Kowloon Tong in Hong Kong, where he made his first independent films in the technical department and at the Chinese University of Hong Kong in Shatin, in Hong Kong's New Territories, where he took a master's degree in Cultural Studies.

Chung's first film short was Chiwawa Express, made in 1992. His first full-length feature film, Innocent, made in 2005, premiered at the Hong Kong International Film Festival and won the NFB Best Canadian Film Award at the Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival. His second feature, End of Love, premiered at the Berlin International Film Festival in 2009, while his third, Speechless, premiered at the BFI London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival. He is a founding member of Ying e Chi, an independent film distributor in Hong Kong.
-mydramalist.com