China-Underground Movie Database > Movies > I Don’t Want to Sleep Alone

I Don’t Want to Sleep Alone

Poster for the movie "I Don't Want to Sleep Alone"

I Don't Want to Sleep Alone (2006)

115 min - Drama, Romance, LGBTQ - 4 September 2006
Your rating:
Not rated yet!

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?

Director:  Tsai Ming-liang

Photos

Storyline

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?


Collections: Tsai Ming-liang

Genres: Drama, Romance, LGBTQ

Details

Official Website: 
Country:   Austria China France Malaysia Taiwan
Release Date:  4 September 2006

Box Office

Company Credits

Production Companies: 

Technical Specs

Runtime:  1 h 55 min

Forest fires burn in Sumatra; smoke covers Kuala Lumpur. Grifters beat an immigrant day laborer and leave him on the streets.

I Don’t Want to Sleep Alone (Chinese: 黑眼圈 Hēi yǎn quān) is a 2006 Malaysian-Taiwanese romantic drama film written and directed by Tsai Ming-liang. Lee Kang-sheng stars in a dual role as a brain-dead patient and as an injured homeless man. The film also stars Norman Atun and Chen Shiang-chyi.

I Don’t Want to Sleep Alone Movie Trailer

Plot

A brain-dead man (Lee) is abused by his mother and cared for by his family’s maid (Chen). Meanwhile, a homeless day laborer (Lee) is severely beaten by a mob before being carried home by a group of men, including Rawang (Atun), a Bangladeshi migrant worker. Rawang nurses the day laborer back to health. The day laborer and maid eventually meet and start a romantic relationship. Their relationship is later joined by Rawang.

Release

I Don’t Want to Sleep Alone was among several films commissioned by Peter Sellars’ New Crowned Hope Festival in Vienna in 2006, to commemorate the 250th anniversary of the birth of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.

The film had its world premiere on 4 September 2006 at the 64th Venice International Film Festival. It made its North American premiere on 11 September at the 2006 Toronto International Film Festival. It was also screened at the Vancouver International Film Festival, the Pusan International Film Festival, the London Film Festival, the Festival of Three Continents, the London Lesbian and Gay Film Festival the Deauville Asian Film Festival and the Hong Kong International Film Festival.

It opened in general release in Taiwan on 23 March 2007, and after a censorship controversy in Malaysia, a version specially edited by director Tsai Ming-liang opened in Malaysian cinemas on 17 May 2007.

The film had a limited release in New York City on 9 May 2007, and was released in the United Kingdom on 16 November 2007.

Censorship in Malaysia

The Malaysian Censorship Board on 4 March 2007 decided to ban this film, which was shot in Malaysia, based on 18 counts of incidences shown in the film depicting the country “in a bad light” for cultural, ethical and racial reasons. However, they later allowed the film to be screened in the country after Tsai agreed to censor parts of the film according to the requirements of the Censorship Board.

Source: Wikipedia