Tony Leung Wong Kar Wai - [new]

In the temple of lonely cinema, their names are carved together, just above the whisper.

Their final collaboration to date, The Grandmaster (2013), is a fitting coda. Leung plays Ip Man, the martial arts master who taught Bruce Lee. But Wong turns a biopic into a meditation on leaving. Ip Man flees Foshan for Hong Kong, leaving behind his wife and his old world. In the rain, he fights with a broken umbrella and perfect posture. Even in kung fu, Leung plays a man holding back — not power, but tears. tony leung wong kar wai

Even their "failure" is fascinating. 2046 (2004), the spiritual sequel to In the Mood for Love , took five years to shoot. Leung plays Chow again, but now hollowed into a sci-fi writer who beds every woman except the one he’s chasing. Critics called it self-indulgent. But watch Leung: his smile now has a drawbridge that never lowers. He’s playing a man who has memorized his own heartbreak and recites it like a lullaby. It’s the masterpiece of a man tired of his own sorrow. In the temple of lonely cinema, their names

Then came the heart of their collaboration: In the Mood for Love (2000). As Chow Mo-wan, a journalist renting a room in 1960s Hong Kong, Leung is a man who speaks only through his spine. He walks past Maggie Cheung’s Su Li-zhen on a staircase so narrow that desire becomes geometry. Their near-misses are more erotic than any kiss. Leung’s face — that famous micro-expression of swallowed grief — finds its fullest expression when he whispers a secret into the stone wall at Angkor Wat. He doesn't cry. He doesn't need to. The ruin does it for him. But Wong turns a biopic into a meditation on leaving