Lau made his film acting debut in a supporting role the 1981 film,
Once Upon a Rainbow and his television acting debut in an episode of the 1981
RTHK series,
Til We Meet Again, in the leading role of "Dragon". The following year, Lau played a major role in director
Ann Hui's
Boat People, which earned him a
Hong Kong Film Award for Best New Performer nomination, as well as starring in the
TVB series,
The Emissary, which shot him to stardom. In 1983, Lau starred as "
Yeung Kuo" in
The Return of the Condor Heroes, which was the top rated TV series of the year in Hong Kong, further boosting his popularity throughout Asia, and landed him the opportunity to star in his first leading film role in the action drama film,
On the Wrong Track in the same year. Lau left TVB in 1985 to fully concentrate in his film career and starring in multiple box office hits before earning his first
Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actor nomination for his role in the 1988 film,
As Tears Go By, directed by
Wong Kar-wai. In 1989 alone, Lau appeared in 16 films, including the top-grossing blockbuster of the year,
God of Gamblers, as "Michael "Dagger" Chan", a role he would reprise in the
sequel the following year. In 1991, Lau established his own production company,
Teamwork Motion Pictures, with its first production being the
martial arts film,
Saviour of the Soul, which Lau starred as a mercenary in the same year, being a critical and commercial success. Throughout the 1990s, Lau starred in over 50 films which include his signature role as "Wah Dee" in 1990's
A Moment of Romance, the
Lee Rock film series (1991) as real life corrupt officer
Lui Lok, the 1992
wuxia film,
Moon Warriors, the 1995 biker film,
Full Throttle and the 1999
Johnnie To-directed action thriller film,
Running Out of Time, which won him his first Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actor. In 1997, Lau also produced the
Fruit Chan-directed drama film,
Made in Hong Kong, which won the
Hong Kong Film Award for Best Film. In 2000, Lau starred as a
Muay thai fighter in his 100th film, ''
A Fighter's Blues, in which he also produced, and netted him the Golden Bauhinia Awards for Best Actor. In 2002, he starred as triad mole Lau Kin-ming in the highly acclaimed crime thriller, Infernal Affairs, a film considered to have "single-handedly revived the moribund Hong Kong film industry." Infernal Affairs'' grossed HK$55,057,176 at the Hong Kong box office, making it Lau's highest-grossing film in Hong Kong to date, and also earned Lau a Best Actor nomination both at the Hong Kong Film Awards and at the Golden Horse Awards. The following year, Lau starred in the sequel,
Infernal Affairs III, which won him the
Golden Horse Award for Best Leading Actor, and in the Buddhism-themed action thriller,
Running on Karma, winning him his second Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actor. The same year, Lau directed and starred in his only directorial feature to date, the musical short
Love Under the Sun to raise awareness about AIDS and dispel common
misconceptions regarding its contagiousness. In 2004, Lau renamed his company, Teamwork Motion Pictures, to
Focus Group Holdings Limited, with its first film production being the crime film,
Jiang Hu, which he also produced and starred as a triad leader who is a target of an assassination hit. The same year, Lau also made his first venture in the Mainland Chinese film market, starring in the
wuxia film,
House of Flying Daggers, which premiered at the
2004 Cannes Film Festival, and the action drama
A World without Thieves, with the two films being the second and third-highest-grossing films of the year at the Chinese box office respectively. In 2007, he played a drug lord in the crime drama film,
Protégé, which won him the
Hong Kong Film Award for Best Supporting Actor. In 2010, Lau played
Di Renjie in
Tsui Hark's
Detective Dee and the Mystery of the Phantom Flame, which was nominated for the
Golden Lion at the
2010 Venice Film Festival. The following year, he starred in Ann Hui 's
A Simple Life, which won four awards at the
68th Venice Film Festival, as well as earning his third Hong Kong Film Award for Best Actor and second Golden Horse Award for Best Leading Actor. In 2013, Lau produced and starred as morally-conflicted cop in the high-octane action film,
Firestorm, which was also the first
3D film production he worked on. In 2016, Lau starred in his first
Hollywood film,
The Great Wall. In 2017, Lau produced and starred as a righteous bomb disposal officer in
Shock Wave, which earned him another Best Actor nomination for at the
27th Hong Kong Film Awards. He returned in 2020 in the thematic sequel,
Shock Wave 2, playing a different character greatly contrasting his role from its predecessor, and the film has grossed US$226.4 million worldwide, making it Lau's highest-grossing film at the global box office to date and was also the
tenth-highest-grossing film of 2020. Lau has received the "No.1 Box office Actor 1985–2005" award of Hong Kong in 2005, yielding a box office total of
HK$1.7 billion for shooting 108 films in that period and was also awarded the "Nielsen Box Office Star of Asia" award by the
Nielsen Company (
ACNielsen) in 2007. Lau has been honored at different international film festivals for his achievements and contributions to the film industry, such as winning the "Asian Filmmaker of the Year" award at the 2006
Busan International Film Festival ==Film==