Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
Ang Lee Reveals
Adjust font size:

One of the world's leading directors, Ang Lee talks about the city's film festival, his headmaster father and his forthcoming Shanghai-set film, an adaptation of an Eileen Chang story.   

 

Ang Lee is the first person to win a prize - the "Overseas Contribution Award for Chinese Films" - at the 9th Shanghai International Film Festival, and the Taiwanese director is without doubt one of the festival's most famous guests even among the crowd of international and domestic stars.   

 

After winning the Best Director Award for Brokeback Mountain at this year's Academy Awards, the 51-year-old Lee is now considered the pride of the Chinese film industry.   

 

When he took the "Overseas Contribution Award" from veteran Chinese director Xie Jin, Lee couldn't help but recall his less-than-successful acting experience in Xie's film, The Last Aristocrats.  

 

"That was when I had just graduated from school in the 1980s. Unfortunately, my scene was cut possibly due to my poor acting," he says, laughing.   

 

Lee also praised the high quality of the organization behind the Shanghai International Film Festival. "I am impressed that so many prestigious film stars and VIPs have been invited here," he says.  

 

Although now based in Hollywood, Lee has a deep affection for Chinese culture. "I was born in Taiwan, but my mother is from Jiangxi Province and my father from Beijing," says Lee. "So I was intensively trained with Chinese traditions and I hope this shows through in my work."  

 

Lee reveals that he started watching the films of Hong Kong director Lee Han Chiang, King Hu and Taiwan's Lee Hsing. "When I was studying in America, I started watching Chinese mainland films by director Xie. I like his films such as Horseman, Hibiscus Town and Wreaths at the Foot of the Mountain, which were all made in Shanghai, the cradle of the Chinese film industry and also the 'Hollywood of the Orient' at the time."   

 

Lee plans to stay in Shanghai for six days. After attending the film fest's International Film Forum, which discussed the relationship between Chinese and Hollywood films, Lee also talked with students from Fudan University's Shanghai Institute of Visual Art on Sunday.   

 

The lecture room in suburban Songjiang District was packed with students eager to listen to the world-class director talking about his filmmaking experiences.   

 

During the casual meeting, Lee passionately recalled his own school life. "The high school I was in is the best one in Taiwan, and my father was the principle at the time. So you can imagine the big pressure that I had from both my father and the fierce competition in getting into universities," says Lee. "Later I started to learn art, but my parents objected. My father had always thought that I should have been a teacher. He only encouraged me in my film career once I was shooting."

 

Though his family were opposed, in 1973 the then-19-year-old surprised his parents by heading to Taipei to study acting. Five years later, he moved to the United States to further pursue his studies. Following his graduation from the University of Illinois, he went east to New York University, where he began his moviemaking career.   

 

Lee once worked in Spike Lee's Joe's Bed-Stuy Barber Shop: We Cut Heads in 1982 as assistant to cinematographer Ernest Dickerson. His own shorts, Dim Lake (1983) and Fine Line (1984) earned prizes and led to representation by the esteemed William Morris Agency.  

 

But then he entered a downturn. For five years, Lee struggled to get projects off the ground, at the same time playing house-husband taking care of his two sons, while his wife, microbiologist Jane Lin, was the bread-winner.   

 

Fortunately in 1990, Lee got a break. He participated in a competition in Taiwan and finally won the top two prizes with Pushing Hands and The Wedding Banquet. Both films, along with Eat Drink Man Woman (1994), find their central metaphor in food, and formed what Lee called his Father Knows Best trilogy.   

 

Pushing Hands (1991) examines the cultural clashes that occur when a father comes to live with his son in America and he takes a shine to a Chinese cooking instructor; The Wedding Banquet is about a marriage of convenience between a gay man and a Chinese immigrant arranged in large part to please the man's parents; Eat Drink Man Woman, which also won an Oscar nomination for Best Foreign-Language Film, tells the story of a father - a renowned Taiwanese cook - and his three daughters as they strive to concoct a recipe for harmonious living. With a touching plot and polished performances, Eat Drink Man Woman opened to laudatory reviews and robust box-office returns.   

 

As to what the core of a film is, Lee says it's always the script. "The story is very important. It should be distinctive or with a new angle, otherwise how can it keep exciting for a group of people (the film crew) for a year-long shooting period?" he asks.  

 

"Currently in China, what we lack most is a good script with which actors can find strong roles to play and directors can shoot good films. I think directors should also take part in the work of writing scripts," adds Lee who has regular scriptwriters - an American scriptwriter for English scripts, who is teaching drama in Columbia University, and a Chinese scriptwriter from Taiwan for Chinese scripts.  

 

Talking about China's art films and commercial movies, Lee thinks the industry still has a long way to go. "The format of filmmaking has long been set by the West. Chinese films need time to combine the local culture with the Western routines," he says. "Though Chinese filmmaking now has a history of 100 years, it still lags behind America which is a similar age.  

 

"I don't doubt the talent of Chinese directors, but it's our culture that is being changed. We should realize it's our own responsibility," he says, adding that director Feng Xiaogang - also vice president of the jury panel of the Shanghai International Film Festival - is the only one who has "seized the knack of making successful commercial films."   

 

Asked about his next project Lust, Caution, adapted from a short story by the late Chinese female writer Eileen Chang (1920-95) who once lived in Shanghai, Lee effuses enthusiastically about his strong fondness for the original story and the author.

 

"Normally the stories about fighting the Japanese army at that time are passionate and patriotic, but Chang had her own view and angle," he reveals. "I am so impressed and curious that she wrote about a girl student who tries to seduce and assassinate a Chinese spy working for the Japanese government. I think it's the perfect story."   

 

Lee says short stories are the perfect length for making a film: "I will have more space and time to organize the story in my film and I will add more dramatic details."   

 

During his brief stay in town, Lee's biggest task is searching for the shooting location and leading actress for the film.   

 

Who will be the leading male character? There are rumors that Hong Kong star Tong Leung will take the part but Lee will only say Leung is a great actor. "I will announce the leading actor in my film after I find the leading actress," he smiles.  

 

"I feel so honored coming to Shanghai, that I'm going to direct Chang's work and that I will shoot the Shanghai of the golden period between the 1930s and the 1940s," he concludes.

 

(Shanghai Daily June 20, 2006)

Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read

Related Stories
Luc Besson, Ang Lee Grace Shanghai Film Festival
Barbie Xu May Replace Zhang Ziyi in Ang Lee's Lust, Caution
Ang Lee to Direct Chinese Spy Thriller
Ang Lee Tops World's Most Influential People
Ang Lee's Next Film
Ang Lee: Blending East and West

Product Directory
China Search
Country Search
Hot Buys
SiteMap | About Us | RSS | Newsletter | Feedback
SEARCH THIS SITE
Copyright ? China.org.cn. All Rights Reserved ????E-mail: webmaster@china.org.cn Tel: 86-10-88828000 京ICP證 040089號(hào)
主站蜘蛛池模板: 黑人video| 99精品无人区乱码1区2区3区| 最近2019中文字幕mv免费看| 亚洲精品第1页| 精品96在线观看影院| 四虎国产精品成人免费久久 | 4hc44四虎www在线影院男同| 天天操2018| 一本色道无码道dvd在线观看 | 老司机精品在线| 国产免费一区二区三区在线观看| 日本三级香港三级人妇99视| 国产精品永久免费视频| 91麻豆国产福利在线观看| 天堂影院www陈冠希张柏芝| 一区二区三区免费精品视频| 成人自慰女黄网站免费大全| 久久97久久97精品免视看秋霞 | 国产精品人成在线观看| 88国产精品欧美一区二区三区| 在线观看亚洲免费| a级毛片高清免费视频| 好男人资源在线观看好| 一看就湿的性行为描写大尺度| 成人综合国产乱在线| 中文版邻居的夫妇交换电影| 日本人与黑人videos系列| 久久天天躁狠狠躁夜夜网站 | 口工里番h全彩动态图| 老太bbwwbbww高潮| 国产suv精品一区二区33| 苍井空亚洲精品AA片在线播放| 国产免费卡一卡三卡乱码| 黄页网址大全免费观看12网站| 国产日韩精品一区二区在线观看播放| 亚洲精品视频在线观看你懂的| 国产精品内射久久久久欢欢| 2021在线观看视频精品免费| 国产精品无码电影在线观看| 2018国产大陆天天弄| 国产精品成人免费视频电影|