Wong Kar Wai and Matthew Weiner Take a Bow at the Academy
Published on July 22, 2013 in oscars.org
One of the most esteemed Hong Kong filmmakers, Wong Kar Wai, made his first
appearance at the Academy for a discussion with the creator of "Mad Men,"
writer-director Matthew Weiner, about the creative process and the enduring
power of martial arts on the silver screen. The July 22 event unfolded for a
packed audience eager to see the director and watch a sneak preview of "The
Grandmaster," his first martial arts film based on real events.
Following introductions by Academy President Hawk Koch and Weiner, a standing
ovation greeted Wong when he stepped onto the stage. “That’s before they’ve even
seen the movie!” Weiner exclaimed. The Chinese-born filmmaker, who emigrated to
Hong Kong as a child, has been refining his intensely colorful signature style
since his 1988 debut film, “As Tears Go By” (which was also the first of his
films to take its title from a well-known pop song).
Wong followed that with his first collaboration with actor Tony Leung on “Days
of Being Wild” (1990), but his major breakthrough in the West came with
“Chungking Express” (1994), a cornerstone release from Quentin Tarantino’s
distribution company, Rolling Thunder. Even greater acclaim was yet to come with
the stylish, bittersweet ’60s period piece “In the Mood for Love” (2000). His
other films include the wuxia epic “Ashes of Time” (1994), “Fallen Angels”
(1995), “Happy Together” (1997), “2046” (2004) and his English-language debut,
“My Blueberry Nights” (2007).
However, as Wong explained, the process of making “The Grandmaster” was an
ambitious undertaking unlike any other in his career. He had been curious about
martial arts since childhood, often wanting to see what was going on behind the
door of the local training school. With this film, he got to take viewers
through that door to tell a story inspired by events in the life of Ip Man, who
after the Japanese occupation of China, kept the tradition of Wing Chun alive
and became the teacher of Bruce Lee.
From inception to release, the film took ten years, and Wong was struck by
existing video of Ip Man demonstrating his technique shortly before his death.
This gave the filmmaker the angle he needed for the film, the idea of “keeping
the torch burning” from one generation to the next to sustain the legacy of
Chinese martial arts.
Weiner also asked Wong about his famous writing process, which often involves
improvisation and a script that leaves room for plenty of flexibility along the
way. “I always finish the script when the film is done!” The secret, Wong
explained, lies in being lucky enough to work with great actors because “I know
how high they can fly.”
“The Grandmaster” was no exception, as it found him reuniting with Tony Leung,
though the actor knew nothing about martial arts and had to undergo three years
of training (breaking his arm twice in the process). Co-star Zhang Ziyi, who
also was in the audience and who appeared onstage briefly before the film,
underwent similarly rigorous, years-long training. It paid off in one of the
film’s highlights, a train station face-off shot over two months in sub-freezing
weather.
Wong found a certain cinematic parallel in the meaning of the term “kung fu”
itself, which he literally translated as “the time you have to spend.” He said
it was reflective of his own process, in which it might take years to bring one
vision to the screen. When Weiner queried him about the importance of dialogue,
he said, “I’m very precise with words,” and went on to explain the necessity of
finding good Mandarin writers to handle the language requirements of this
particular film’s story. However, for the filmmaker, the process is really an
alchemy of “sound, words, ideas and images.” When it comes to creating that
synthesis, Wong Kar Wai is indisputably a master.
http://www.oscars.org/events/wong-kar-wai/index.html
An Academy Salute to Wong Kar Wai
The Academy’s summer celebration of kung fu continued with a salute to
writer-director Wong Kar Wai and a special advance screening of “The
Grandmaster,” his new film about the instructor who trained Bruce Lee.
Hong Kong-based filmmaker Wong Kar Wai is known for his unique sense of style
and emotionally resonant work. The first Chinese director to win the Best
Director Award at the Cannes Film Festival for his 1997 film “Happy Together,”
Wong has been called a “poet of time” by Sight & Sound and “perhaps the most
revered and singular of Hong Kong auteurs” by The New York Times.
His other films include “Chungking Express,” “Fallen Angels,” “In the Mood for
Love,” “2046” and his first English-language film, “My Blueberry Nights,” which
starred Norah Jones in her acting debut.
“The Grandmaster” tells the story of martial arts grandmaster Ip Man (Tony
Leung), who trained Bruce Lee. As he seeks to perfect his practice of the
fighting style Wing Chun, Ip Man collides with another determined kung fu
master, Gong Er (Ziyi Zhang), during the Japanese invasion of China in 1936 and
the tumultuous years that follow. The cast also includes Wang Qingxiang, Chang
Chen, Xiao Shengyang and Song Hye Kyo, as well as hundreds of Asia’s top martial
artists.
The film has already been released in China and will hit U.S. theaters on August
23.
http://www.oscars.org/events-exhibitions/events/2013/07/wong-kar-wai-salute.html