A Film Built on Absence
Vanishing Point (消失的人), directed by Cheng Weihao, is a psychological crime thriller set to premiere during the 2026 May holiday season. Starring Zheng Kai and Liu Haocun, alongside Roy Chiu and Li Chen, the film belongs to a growing genre of ensemble mysteries that explore not just crime, but the hidden fractures within ordinary lives.
Rather than relying on spectacle, the film chooses a more confined and intimate setting—a residential building—where the story unfolds through intersecting perspectives. It is a space that feels familiar, almost mundane, yet gradually reveals itself as something far more unsettling.

The Story: When One Disappearance Unravels Many
The narrative begins with a simple but disturbing event. One winter morning, a young boy suddenly disappears inside an apartment building. His father, Tang Yu (Zheng Kai), becomes the emotional center of the story, driven by urgency, fear, and a growing sense that something is fundamentally wrong.
As the search intensifies, the film begins to peel back layers of the building’s residents. What first appears to be an isolated incident slowly expands into a network of secrets: concealed crimes, unresolved violence, and relationships marked by tension and silence.
Each character seems to know something—or hide something. And as their stories begin to intersect, the question shifts from what happened to who is truly involved.
Characters: Faces Within the Same Shadow
Zheng Kai’s Tang Yu is not a conventional hero. He is a father pushed into desperation, navigating both external chaos and internal collapse. His performance anchors the film in emotional reality, grounding the mystery in personal loss.
Liu Haocun plays Lin Yutong, a character defined less by what she says and more by what she withholds. There is a quiet unease surrounding her presence, suggesting that she exists closer to the truth than she initially appears.
Roy Chiu’s Yan Wu introduces a darker, more volatile energy, embodying the overt violence that contrasts with the film’s otherwise restrained tone. Meanwhile, Li Chen and the supporting cast contribute to the layered structure, where no character feels entirely peripheral.
A Different Kind of Suspense
What distinguishes Vanishing Point is its refusal to treat mystery as a puzzle with a single solution. The film is less concerned with identifying a culprit than with exposing the conditions that allow something—or someone—to disappear.
The apartment building becomes more than a setting; it functions as a contained world where moral boundaries blur. Privacy turns into isolation, and familiarity becomes a disguise.
In this environment, disappearance is not always physical. It can also mean the erasure of truth, responsibility, or even identity.
Closing Note
Vanishing Point positions itself as more than a conventional thriller. It is a study of proximity—how closely people can live together while remaining fundamentally unknown to one another.
And in the end, the most unsettling question it raises is not who vanished, but how easily someone can.