
Neo Yau
Acting
Biography
No biography available for Neo Yau.
Born: September 24, 1990
Place of Birth: Hong Kong, British Crown Colony
Known For

Angela
All clothes have a story to tell. Ma was about to close the Angela laundry shop for the day when Shum appeared. A young man with a head injury and handful of dirty clothes from his stay at the street during the Umbrella Movement, Shum needs his clothes washed. Full of passion for the social cause, Shum initially chided Ma for staying in the comfort of the shop. However, these two strangers slowly opened up to each other when a number of characters passed by the shop, revealing the tumultuous world behind Ma’s stoic silence. Shum also gained new insight on meaningfulness, which exists not only within a worthy cause but also at seemingly abandoned clothes.

Haters Gonna Stay
The art film “Looking Away” can make him a success. On the field of love, Qiu’s relationship with his girlfriend Enni is okay, but he always worried that Enni would leave him. One day, Qiu Haifan, Qiu’s grandfather, suddenly appeared. He was troublesome by nature, making Qiu’s life difficult.

The Way I Dance
A movie production company executive decided to produce the sequel of the acclaimed dance movie "The Way We Dance", but it's not directed by the original director.

The Way We Talk
Wolf, born into a deaf family, embraces sign language with confidence despite obstacles in life; Sophie, having received a cochlear implant at a young age, continuously strives to be seen as "normal" despite having a "deaf accent." Alan, with a cochlear implant like Sophie, is capable of both spoken language and sign language; he advocates for diverse modes of communication within the deaf community. Bound by love and friendship, the three embark on a self-discovering journey that is not without its moments of pain.

Ten Years
Five shorts reveal a fictional Hong Kong in 2025, depicting a dystopian city where residents and activists face crackdowns under iron-fisted rule.

She Remembers, He Forgets
A wonderfully charming and bittersweet story about teenage friendship, idealist dreams and a city that transcend changing times, this rare Hong Kong-produced gem influenced by Hayao Miyazaki and Shunji Iwai sweeps with nostalgia. In search of an answer for her broken marriage, Gigi journeys into her shiny high school year memories only to discover a deeply hidden secret that will transform her life.

No. 1 Chung Ying Street
Four young lives were changed forever when they become involved in the 1967 Hong Kong Leftist Riot; half a century later, another four face similar challenges amidst the Mainland-Hong Kong conflict.

FOUL
Yan is a basket ball fanatic who barely makes it to Form 6, not by studying hard but by his skill on the court.

Affection
The story is told from the point of view of a high school girl called Jessie (Jessica Wong) whose talent for the Chinese board game Go has earned her the nickname ‘Queen Chess’. She balances her time between practising Go and hanging out with her boyfriend (Yau Hawk-sau Neo). The former seems to win for this studious girl, but it is clear she’s also seeking something to pull her out of this lonely life of late-night computer games.

Vital Signs
In one of his finest dramatic performances yet, Louis Koo stars as a veteran ambulanceman who simply wants to do his job without any interference from his boss. While he considers emigrating with his daughter, he clashes with his new partner, a young go-getter on the fast-track up the bureaucratic ladder. A mature directorial effort by Cheuk Wan-chi, this dramedy about Hong Kong’s civil service culture and the latest emigration wave is a charming, yet sobering love letter to her city and its people, especially those who still remain.
Filmography
as Player 001
as Wong Wai
as Wolf Yip
as Brother Sau / Little Sau
as Journalist / Leung's Classmate
as Grey goods trader
as So Chun Man
as Cheng Sai Ho
as Ng Yan Nok
as Shum
as Marco (segment "Self-immolator")
as Young Pang Shing-wah
as Jun
as Bill
as Keung
as Yan