On
review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 91% based on 32 reviews, with an average rating of 7.70/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "
Days of Being Wild uses a young man's struggle to come to terms with a family secret as the foundation for a beautifully filmed drama with a darkly dreamy allure". On
Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 93 out of 100 based on 21 critic reviews, indicating "universal acclaim". The film ranked third on the
Hong Kong Film Awards Association (HKFAA)'s 2005 list of The Best 100 Chinese Motion Pictures. It placed 37th on the "Asian Cinema 100 List" at the
20th Busan International Film Festival in 2015. The South Korean director and critic
Park Chan-wook called
Days of Being Wild "an enigmatic and trancelike fantasy" set in the early 1960s. He wrote that it is a metaphor for the return of the British colony of Hong Kong to China, which was planned for 1997. The return of Hong Kong caused deep fears, as many Hong Kongers feared that the relative liberties that existed under British rule would end under the rule of the People's Republic of China. Park noted that much of the film is set at night and that many scenes are dimly lit, creating a dark mood. Likewise, Park noted that much of the
Days of Being Wild takes place in claustrophobic rooms and trains, which he saw as a metaphor for the characters' limited futures. He noted that all the characters look backward to the past rather than forward to the future. Yuddy is obsessed with finding his mother he never knew; Li-zhen is equally obsessed with remembering 3 pm 16 April 1960, the moment she met Yuddy; Tide cannot forget his short-lived quasi-romance with Li-zhen; Fung-ying can not give up her love for Yuddy; and Zeb holds on to his friendship with Yuddy despite the way he treats him. In a similar way, all the characters end the film on an unhappy note. Yuddy's mother rejects him and his trip to the Philippines leads to his murder; Fung-ying goes to the Philippines to find Yuddy, unaware of his death; Zeb is rejected by Fung-ying; and Tide and Li-zhen are unable to reconnect. Park argued that the way that the characters cannot look forward to a better future and are instead obsessed with the lost world of the past reflected the sense of despair at the heart of the film, suggesting that Hong Kong had its best days in the 1960s and has no bright future in its planned return to China. The American critic
Jonathan Rosenbaum wrote of
Days of Being Wild: "Wong Kar-wai’s idiosyncratic style first became apparent in this gorgeously moody second feature (1990), whose romantic vision of 1960 Hong Kong as a network of unfulfilled longings would later echo through
In the Mood for Love...As critic Tony Rayns has noted, it’s 'the first film to rhyme nostalgia for a half-imaginary past with future shock'". Rosenbaum noted that the similarity between Yuddy and the characters played by
James Dean, and that when Dean's last film,
Rebel Without a Cause (1955), was released in Hong Kong, its title in Cantonese was
Days of Being Wild. Rosenbaum noted that the "puzzling coda" of an ending with an young man preparing going out was meant to be the start of a planned sequel, which was never made. ==Home media==