Premiere of The Grandmaster in Singapore | SENATUS

ASIA'S PREMIER LUXURY & LIFESTYLE MAGAZINE

SENATUS.NET

Premiere of The Grandmaster in Singapore
By SENATUS Editor | 23 January 2013

Tony Leung was so overcome by emotion when he saw the final cut of martial arts epic The Grandmaster that he cried. "When I saw the finished piece, I had a moment of extreme emotion, and I cried," admitted Leung in Mandarin at the Singapore press conference to promote the film with director Wong Kar Wai on Wednesday.

"I was overcome by the feeling -- it was the fruit of four years of work and challenges." Leung, 50, reportedly broke his hands twice during training during filming, and he even began taking Wing Chun lessons three years beforehand to prepare himself for his role.

The cast also had to film through rough weather conditions -- toughing it out in China on the coldest winter in ten years and then later through a sweltering summer. The movie's release was repeatedly delayed, reportedly due to Leung's injuries and many scenes had to be cut as there was too much footage.

But if box office figures are anything to go by, it looks like all that pain and suffering was worth it -- "The Grandmaster" has grossed about S$2.3 million in Hong Kong and S$60 million in China so far.

3 Photos | View Photos

Beauty & Skincare

Dior presents Dior The Luck Lipstick as a couture talisman for the new year

Watches & Jewelry

Tiffany & Co. unveils its Pegasus motif and Knot collection for the Lunar New Year #YearoftheHorse

Watches & Jewelry

Love unfolds with the Harry Winston Valentine’s Day Gift Guide

Beauty & Skincare

Kendall Jenner lights up the room with the new Emporio Armani Power of You

Fashion & Style

Bella Hadid returns to the spotlight for the Saint Laurent spring 2026 mombasa bag revival

Beauty & Skincare

Song Hye Kyo celebrates two centuries of heritage with the Guerlain bee bottle

All Rights Reserved. SENATUS © 2026
 

SENATUS is a registered trademark of SENATUS PTE LTD. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or used otherwise, except as expressly permitted in writing by SENATUS.