| 
  
 
 
 |  |  
 | HK actor Aaron Kwok and mainland actress Zhou Xun display 
 their trophies after winning the Best Leading Actor and Best Leading 
 Actress awards during the 43rd Golden Horse Awards in Taipei 
 November 25, 2006. [Reuters] |  Hong Kong pop idol Aaron Kwok proved he's a bona fide actor and mainland China's Zhou Xun cemented her 
 status as one of the industry's biggest stars as the duo won top acting 
 honors at the 43rd Golden Horse Awards the Chinese-language equivalent of 
 the 
 
 
 Oscars.   
  Zhou's movie, the musical "Perhaps 
 Love," also took home best director for Hong Kong's Peter 
 Chan, but Kwok's film, "After This Our 
 Exile," the meticulously told story of a troubled family's 
 breakdown, won best picture and best supporting actor for 9-year-old Ian 
 Gouw. 
  "Perhaps Love" also won for best 
 cinematography and best original film song. 
  The 41-year-old Kwok made his name as one of Chinese pop's "Four 
 Heavenly Kings" in the 1990s, along with Jacky Cheung, Andy Lau and Leon 
 Lai. 
  Kwok boosted his acting credentials with a surprise best actor win at 
 last year's Golden Horse Awards for playing a troubled police officer 
 obsessed with his missing wife in "Divergence." 
  He proved last year's win wasn't a 
 fluke by clinching top acting honors again this year with 
 a powerful performance of the downward spiral of a hot-tempered cook, who 
 pimps and forces his son to steal after losing his job, his home and his 
 wife. 
  Kwok described his growth as a performer. 
  "When you grow up, first you have to let go of your so-called baggage 
 as an idol. Once you're free of the baggage of an idol, you can play any 
 character in a relaxed state. You can have different creative spaces and 
 you don't have any boundaries," he told reporters after his win. 
  Meanwhile, Chinese actress Zhou completed a clean sweep of Chinese 
 cinema's top awards for her portrayal of a movie star caught between past 
 and present loves in "Perhaps Love." 
  Zhou's character also won best actress honors at the Hong Kong Film 
 Awards, Hong Kong's Golden Bauhinia awards and Hong Kong Film Critics 
 Society awards earlier this year. 
  After her win, she said acting "like life, is a constant learning 
 process." 
  "As I myself mature, my performance of characters will also mature," 
 Zhou said. 
  The best picture win for "After This Our Exile" also marks a successful 
 comeback for director Patrick Tam, considered part of Hong Kong's "new 
 wave" of cinema in the 1980s. 
  The movie is Tam's first after a 17-year break, during which he trained 
 screenwriters in Malaysia and edited famed Hong Kong art-house director 
 Wong Kar-wai's "Days of Being Wild." The director didn't attend the awards 
 ceremony. 
  (Agencies) |