Canadian actor Michael Cera says a long-awaited encounter with screen legend Jackie Chan ended in comic confusion when the Hong Kong star mistook him for a contest winner during overlapping press stops at BBC Radio 2 in London earlier this week. According to Cera, who is promoting Wes Anderson’s “The Phoenician Scheme,” a photographer ushered him down the corridor after spotting Chan preparing to discuss “Karate Kid: Legends” on the same station. “We took a picture, but he looked at me like, ‘Who is this person, what’s going on?’ I’m pretty sure he thought I’d won a backstage pass,” Cera told NME.
Video clips from the NME interview quickly circulated on TikTok and YouTube, amplifying Cera’s anecdote and drawing sympathetic laughter from fans who dubbed the meeting the “competition-winner handshake.” Variety’s social channels recapped the exchange, noting that both actors have been darting between European media hubs on parallel publicity tours. An IMDb news brief added that Cera’s wife, Nadine, captured the photo on his phone before Chan was whisked into the studio.
Industry watchers say such unscripted mash-ups are increasingly common as studios compress global promo schedules. A recent Vulture analysis of celebrity press circuits argues that viral moments—planned or not—have become valuable currency for maintaining visibility in a crowded market. Public-relations strategist Maria Delgado, speaking to People at the New York premiere of “The Phoenician Scheme,” called Cera’s story “a harmless reminder that not every star tracks every rising peer.”
Despite the awkward start, Cera said he remains an admirer of Chan’s work and hopes they will “actually talk” if their paths cross again during this summer’s festival circuit. For Chan, the misfire comes amid heightened attention as “Karate Kid: Legends” readies its August 15 release, while Anderson’s period caper reaches U.S. screens on June 6. Whether the photo surfaces is up to Chan’s team—Cera joked that he left the corridor without asking for permission to post it.