Infernal Affairs Iii Apr 2026
Infernal Affairs III is not a crowd-pleaser. It is a requiem. It abandons the sleek thriller mechanics of the original for a slow, dreamlike, and deeply sad meditation on identity and punishment. The ending—which re-contextualizes the entire trilogy’s famous final line from the first film (“I’m a cop”)—is a gut-punch of existential horror.
The non-linear editing is ambitious. The film jumps between three time periods without hand-holding. For attentive viewers, this reveals clever parallels and tragic ironies. For casual viewers, it can feel frustratingly opaque. The film assumes you have the first two movies memorized. It rewards rewatching but punishes distraction. Infernal Affairs III
A must-watch for fans of the trilogy. Skip it if you haven’t seen the first two. Watch it for Andy Lau’s career-best performance. Infernal Affairs III is not a crowd-pleaser
This is where the trilogy shows its seams. Infernal Affairs III tries to do too much. The subplot involving a shady Chinese security officer (Chen Daoming) feels grafted on from a different, more political thriller. It muddies the water rather than deepening the mythos. Furthermore, the absence of the tight, propulsive editing of the first film is felt. Some scenes meander, and the emotional impact is diluted by the constant time-jumping. For attentive viewers, this reveals clever parallels and
Andy Lau has never been better. In the first film, his Lau was a cool, calculating predator. Here, the facade cracks. Lau’s journey into insomnia, hallucinations, and sheer panic is devastating to watch. He is no longer a villain; he is a broken man trapped in a prison of his own making. The film’s most brilliant stroke is using the ghost of Tony Leung’s Yan—the undercover cop Lau helped kill—as a silent, accusing apparition. These moments are less about ghost stories and more about the manifestation of irredeemable guilt.