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City Pages: I read that for you and Maggie Cheung, watching In the Mood for Love was a painful experience: You had filmed so much, and so little of it was on the screen. Was that true for 2046?
Tony Leung: It was the same. And much more...scary. A few days before [the world premiere in] Cannes, we were still doing the dubbing.
CP: One criticism of 2046 has been that the characters are not as sympathetic as in In the Mood for Love, and the story is not as engaging.
Leung: I don't know how you can compare [the two films]. In the Mood for Love is a very straightforward love story, so it's easy for the audience to follow it. 2046 is a story about love. So it doesn't have a specific direction. It's just a kind of feeling. At the same time, it can also relate to Kar-wai's previous movies. Like the cab scene: I related that to me and Maggie in In the Mood for Love--and me and Leslie [Cheung] in Happy Together. You can call [2046] a summary of all [Wong's] movies.
CP: Much has been written about the painful, drawn-out process of working with Wong Kar-wai--the lack of a script, the sudden changes in characterization, the endless shooting. Would you say that process is getting more messy?
Leung: You can say more messy because there are more actors [in 2046]. Every one of them is a big star in Asia, and the scheduling conflicts caused big problems. [Wong] still works very much like before. I've gotten used to it. Newcomers [to his sets] find it very frustrating [laughs]. The more [actors], the more counseling I have to do.
CP: You've said that you've come to trust him more. Do you feel he trusts you more?
Leung: No. I've found that he loves all his actors. That's why they appear so special in his movies. He's a very good observer. He can always explore some qualities [in actors] that sometimes even they are not aware [that they have]. I don't know if it's his method of making movies or his [method of] observation. He's a very sensitive person. After a period of time, an actor will fall very easily into a stereotype. You need to work with somebody else who can give you a different chemistry--to make you change. Sometimes actors have too much power. When a director says, "Follow my direction," some actors have the power to say, "No, I don't want to do that." But if you don't take that challenge, you might miss some surprises. When I work with Kar-wai, he always surprises me.
CP: How did he surprise you in 2046?
Leung: At the very beginning, I think we were trying to do something new. But from the first day he asked me to revisit the character [from In the Mood for Love], the scenes, the colors, everything kept reminding me of the loss. I didn't find anything new. I don't know whether he intends to do that. I think he might intend to do that.
CP: You argued for a moustache to distinguish this version of the character from the other one--because you had such a strong emotional "hangover" [from In the Mood for Love]. Did this [character] hang around a long time, too?
Leung: Yeah. It took me quite a long time to get out of Mr. Chow from 2046. Even when I was doing Tokyo Raiders II last year, [Mr. Chow] still lingered. I still think I'm that man. The director [of Tokyo Raiders II] said, "You are not that guy [in 2046]!"