Tears and Truth: Vu Mong Lung’s Mother Speaks Out for the First Time — ‘They Lied About What Really Happened…’

For weeks, fans around the world have mourned the sudden and heartbreaking loss of Chinese actor Yu Menglong — a man beloved for his quiet charm, his poetic performances, and his disarming smile.

But until now, no one truly knew what happened on that final night.At precisely 8 p.m. last night, a short video appeared on Weibo under the title: “I am Yu Menglong’s mother. Today, I will tell the truth.”

Vu Mong Lung leaked clip before he died, screaming in the middle of the  night, suspected friends? | Chinese stars | Entertainment - VGT TV

It lasted only nine minutes. Within hours, it was deleted. Yet millions had already watched it, shared it, and saved it.
What followed was not a political statement or a conspiracy theory — it was a mother’s trembling confession, filled with pain, fury, and revelation.

“My Son Did Not Die in an Accident.”
Sitting at a small wooden table, Madam Yu, a woman in her late sixties, looked straight into the camera. Her voice shook, but her eyes were unflinching.

“They told the world it was a car crash,” she began. “But I know my son. I know how careful he was. He never drove that late. He never drank. He was followed that night — and he was scared.”

She paused, pressing a tissue to her lips. The room was silent except for the faint hum of a refrigerator in the background. Then she continued:

“I’ve stayed silent because they told me to. They said if I spoke, the truth would die with me. But my son is already gone. What else can they take?”

Those words — “my son is already gone” — broke through the screen.

The Mysterious Days Before His Death

Vụ "mỹ nam số 1 Trung Quốc" rơi lầu tử vong: Nhiều uẩn khúc đáng ngờ ở hiện  trường, nghi bị mưu sát?

Yu Menglong had been preparing for a new film, one that would mark his return after nearly a year away from the public eye.
His friends said he was excited, even joyful.
But according to his mother, something changed two days before his death.Online movie streaming services

“He called me at 11 p.m.,” she said softly. “He sounded frightened. He said, ‘Mom, if anything happens to me, remember — it wasn’t an accident.’”

Her voice cracked. She took a breath and looked down at a stack of papers beside her — printouts of what appeared to be phone records, receipts, and screenshots of text messages between Yu Menglong and his former lawyer, Li Jian, who had gone missing just days after the actor’s funeral.

“They were trying to silence him,” Madam Yu claimed. “He wanted to expose something bigger — contracts, payments, names of people in high places. That’s why Li Jian disappeared. They were working together.”

Xôn xao clip nam diễn viên Vu Mông Lung kêu cứu thảm thiết trước khi tử  vong | Phụ Nữ & Gia Đình

The moment she said “names of people in high places,” the clip glitched — as if it had been edited or interrupted. When it resumed, her voice was calm again.

“He Wasn’t Depressed. He Was Terrified.”
Online rumors had suggested Yu Menglong was battling depression or substance abuse. His mother vehemently denied those claims.

“He was healthy. He was planning a new project. He was talking about buying me a house in Hangzhou,” she said. “Does that sound like someone ready to die?”

According to Madam Yu, her son had received multiple anonymous phone calls in the week before his death. She claimed one voice told him bluntly:

“Stop digging into what doesn’t concern you.”

She added that Yu had shared the numbers with a close friend, who later reported them to authorities — but no investigation was ever launched.

The Letter Found in His Apartment

Mẹ Vu Mông Lung ngã gục khi con trai qua đời - Giải trí

The most shocking part of the video came when Madam Yu held up a crumpled sheet of paper. It was written in Yu Menglong’s handwriting.

“I don’t know who I can trust anymore,” it read. “I only know that truth comes with a price. If something happens to me, tell them — I tried.”

The mother broke down as she read those words aloud.
Tears streamed down her face as she whispered:

“He knew. He knew they were coming for him.”

The Vanishing of the Video

The clip, posted under a newly created account, reached over 20 million views in under an hour before it was taken down across all major Chinese platforms.
Searches for “Yu Menglong’s mother,” “truth video,” or “car crash investigation” now return no results.

Yet fragments remain. Reuploads on Telegram and foreign sites like Reddit are spreading rapidly, with subtitled versions in English, Korean, and Vietnamese. The hashtags #JusticeForYuMenglong and #HearHerOut have become rallying cries for fans demanding answers.

An anonymous source from the entertainment industry told The Guardian Asia: “If what she said is true, it exposes more than one death — it exposes an entire system built on silence.”

Silence from Authorities
Neither police nor the Ministry of Culture have commented on the video.
Local news outlets that attempted to cover the story reported being “instructed to remove all related content.”

One journalist, speaking under condition of anonymity, confirmed that Madam Yu had been visited by “officials” shortly after the video went live.
Her current whereabouts are unknown.
Neighbors say her apar

tment lights have been off since early morning.

A close family friend wrote on WeChat before her account was suspended:

“She knew they would come. That’s why she recorded it in advance.”

A Mother’s Last Words
The final minute of the video is now being described as one of the most haunting pieces of footage ever shared on Chinese social media.

Madam Yu, her eyes swollen from tears, looked straight into the camera and whispered:

“I don’t want revenge. I just want the world to know my son didn’t die because of fate. He died because he told the truth — and because truth frightens powerful people.”

She reached for a framed photo of Yu Menglong — smiling, holding a guitar, wearing the same denim jacket he was last seen in.

“If they take me next,” she said, “remember this: they can erase videos, they can erase headlines, but they can’t erase a mother’s voice.”

Then the screen went black.

The Echo That Won’t Fade
Within hours, her message had crossed borders. Journalists, activists, and fans began archiving every version of the clip they could find.
International press agencies demanded an independent investigation into Yu Menglong’s death.
Human rights organizations issued statements calling for the protection of whistleblowers and families of deceased public figures.

Meanwhile, ordinary people lit candles outside theaters where Yu once performed, holding signs that read:

“Truth never dies.”

No one knows where Madam Yu is now.
No one knows what will happen to those who continue to share her words.

But one thing is certain: the voice of a grieving mother has pierced the wall of silence surrounding Yu Menglong’s death.
And somewhere in the digital shadows, her trembling words continue to echo…