Jacky reveals that there is a bed scene with Maggie


The 34th Hong Kong International Film Festival held its press conference in the west coast. "Crossing Hennessy - 月滿軒尼詩" starring Jacky Cheung, Tang Wei and Maggie Cheung have been chosen to be one of the opening films. Yesterday the cast attended the press conference.

Jacky reveals that there is a bed scene with Maggie in the film, but it is a limited bed scene, there are absolutely no intense bodyily contact involved. There is not even a tiny bit of intimate scenes with Tang Wei either, he said: "Last night I was watching "Lust, Caution" on the movie channel. (Do you dare to accept those films?) No, No, No. (No what?) I don't have the body figure nor the courage. (If you have courage or not, your wife won't let you?) My wife won't say she won't allow it, just in her heart she won't. Tony Leung and I are different, he is a full time actor, I can do some singing to earn money." Jacky frankly said that he's not clear if the film will be banned because when he was shooting for it, he has never thought that this film would affect Mainland playing it. As for Connie Chan's mother sudden departure from this world, Jacky expressed that he sends his condolence to her.

Jacky in 2 Chinese New Year Film releases


HONG KONG - HEAVENLY King Jacky Cheung finds himself in two movies this festive season and says he is as stunned as anyone else.

Cheung, who plays a driver in an SMS flirtation with a pianist (Rene Liu) in the star-laden romance Hot Summer Days, is also in the comedy 72 Tenants Of Prosperity.

Speaking from the sidelines of the premiere of Hot Summer Days on Tuesday night, he said: 'I was doing a Chinese New Year movie and a Valentine's Day movie. How was I to know they would be released together?'

It just so happens that this year, Valentine's Day falls on the first day of Chinese New Year.

He said the two films were different and hoped both would do well at the box office.

Hot Summer Days, directed by first-time film-makers Tony Chan and Wing Shya, also stars Nicholas Tse, Barbie Hsu, Daniel Wu and Vivian Hsu.

Jacky Going Jazz in Latest Album


It has been more than five long years since Jacky Cheung released a Cantonese studio album (his last, Life Is Like A Dream, was in 2004). So, Private Corner is highly anticipated - but instead of churning out more of the Canto pop that's peppered his career, he has steered onto a different musical path: Jazz.

And guess what - he's great at it. But then again, Jacky has always been able to deliver the goods no matter what he's singing, whether it's the swaggering Everyday Is Christmas, the neo-swing of Double Trouble, the smooth Let It Go, or the ballad 12 Tones. Ever the chameleon, jazz crooner Jacky could win over an entirely new audience demographic - and make him withstand the test of the ever-fickle Chinese pop scene.