

He appears as Kaneshiro Takeshi ( 金城 武) in Japanese media.

Kaneshiro ( 金 城) is a common Okinawan surname, albeit with an unusual pronunciation, as the usual reading is Kinjō, while the traditional Okinawan pronunciation is Kanagusuku or Kanegusuku. Mandarin was the first language he spoke while growing up in Taiwan. Kaneshiro is multilingual, fluent in Mandarin, Hokkien, Japanese, and to lesser degrees in Cantonese and English. During his time at secondary school, Kaneshiro began working in television commercials, and he decided to leave school to pursue a full-time career in music and acting. After graduating from Taipei Japanese Junior High School, he enrolled at an English-medium international school, Taipei American School, where he learned English. The son of a Japanese businessman and a Taiwanese homemaker, Kaneshiro has two elder half-brothers: one who is seven years his senior, and another who is just one year older. He was born and raised in Taipei, but holds Japanese citizenship.

Kaneshiro’s mother is from Taiwan and his father is from Okinawa, Japan.

Ah Fei continually breaks into his apartment changing where his belongings live, and bringing in things of her own, which all goes by unnoticed by 663! 6 Hours later, she falls in love with another man, cop 663 (Tony Leung) who also was left by his girlfriend. With the blonde girl leaving as abruptly as she appeared, 223 meets a young girl, Ah Fei (Faye Wong) at his favourite take away. He eventually meets a mysterious blonde wigged girl (Brigitte Lin) and proceeds to quickly fall in love with her. The two that remain are unique in style and tone, with the first being a rather bleak and definitely more artistically shot by Andrew Lau and follows the story of “223” (Takeshi Kaneshiro) a plain clothes cop pining for his ex-girlfriend.
Takeshi kaneshiro chungking express movie#
The movie was originally supposed to cover 3 separate stories, but as filming commenced, the third was done away with eventually turning up in ‘Fallen Angels’ a year or so later. A cult classic around the globe and one of Wong Kar Wai’s quickest productions, filmed during a 3 month break from another classic ‘Ashes of Time’, ‘Chungking Express’ is a fabulous piece of art house filmmaking that encapsulates true emotion and showcases some flawless performances from some of the East?s finest stars.Įssentially two separate stories loosely linked by the central location of a small take away the majority of filming took place in and around the bustling Tsimshatsui and the now famous Chungking Mansions.
