Zhang Ziyi
Posted: 2 Jan 2013
Timeout Hong Kong | Film Features
China hasn’t seen an actress as equally treasured and disliked as Zhang Ziyi for
a very long time. Edmund Lee visits The Grandmaster star in Beijing to hear
about her musings on Wong Kar-wai, the essence of acting and all those clueless
haters out there.
At one point during our interview in a photo studio in Sanlitun, Beijing, with
the first December snow descending on the capital, Zhang Ziyi describes herself
as an ‘old school’ actress who ‘thinks in the traditional way’. “There are many
people who take the less proper paths to look for their own sense of being,” she
adds. “That’s how the environment [of show business] is – it’s not a very clean
environment.” The truth is, as one of her country’s greatest current movie
icons, Zhang must also live with the same time-honoured traditions of
superstardom that hark back to the time of Ruan Lingyu nearly a century ago:
putting up a defiant face on screen, confronting uber-sensational scandals off
it, and juggling not gentle admiration and polite indifference but love and
hatred by even the most casual observers day in and day out, year after year.
It is, indeed, extraordinary to think that the 33-year-old Beijing-born actress
is already commanding an even higher international profile, and facing far more
outrageous slanders, than Ruan ever experienced – even with the latter’s famous
last words ‘gossip is a fearful thing’. “There are only two sides to one’s
personality: it’s either tough or soft,” Zhang says, almost nonchalantly, when
asked about her consistently strong-minded screen persona that can, no doubt,
find roots inside the actress herself. The list of such roles is set to grow one
longer with the expected January 10 local release – if we’re lucky – of Wong
Kar-wai’s 1930s-set martial arts drama The Grandmaster, which has also been
chosen to open the Berlin International Film Festival on February 7. In it,
Zhang makes her latest star turn as the emotionally unflinching daughter of a
respected leader in the martial arts world, who is caught between her admiration
for the real-life Wing Chun master Ip Man (Tony Leung Chiu-wai) and her duty to
her father’s legacy after his passing.
“When I encounter a tough character, it resembles me a little bit; and when I
encounter a soft character, there’s also part of me in it,” says Zhang. “There
are aspects of me in each of my characters.” Does she perhaps agree that the
filmmakers look to be especially keen to cast her in insubordinate roles?
“Actually, many of the roles highlight the greatness of women. It’s as simple as
that. So…” She hesitates briefly, before flashing a rare glimpse of the
cockiness – the only instance in this interview – that has allegedly earned her
a myriad of detractors: “Perhaps that’s why I’m always [the directors’] first
choice.”
China hasn’t seen an actress as equally treasured and disliked as Zhang Ziyi for
a very long time. Edmund Lee visits The Grandmaster star in Beijing to hear
about her musings on Wong Kar-wai, the essence of acting and all those clueless
haters out there.
At one point during our interview in a photo studio in Sanlitun, Beijing, with
the first December snow descending on the capital, Zhang Ziyi describes herself
as an ‘old school’ actress who ‘thinks in the traditional way’. “There are many
people who take the less proper paths to look for their own sense of being,” she
adds. “That’s how the environment [of show business] is – it’s not a very clean
environment.” The truth is, as one of her country’s greatest current movie
icons, Zhang must also live with the same time-honoured traditions of
superstardom that hark back to the time of Ruan Lingyu nearly a century ago:
putting up a defiant face on screen, confronting uber-sensational scandals off
it, and juggling not gentle admiration and polite indifference but love and
hatred by even the most casual observers day in and day out, year after year.
It is, indeed, extraordinary to think that the 33-year-old Beijing-born actress
is already commanding an even higher international profile, and facing far more
outrageous slanders, than Ruan ever experienced – even with the latter’s famous
last words ‘gossip is a fearful thing’. “There are only two sides to one’s
personality: it’s either tough or soft,” Zhang says, almost nonchalantly, when
asked about her consistently strong-minded screen persona that can, no doubt,
find roots inside the actress herself. The list of such roles is set to grow one
longer with the expected January 10 local release – if we’re lucky – of Wong
Kar-wai’s 1930s-set martial arts drama The Grandmaster, which has also been
chosen to open the Berlin International Film Festival on February 7. In it,
Zhang makes her latest star turn as the emotionally unflinching daughter of a
respected leader in the martial arts world, who is caught between her admiration
for the real-life Wing Chun master Ip Man (Tony Leung Chiu-wai) and her duty to
her father’s legacy after his passing.
“When I encounter a tough character, it resembles me a little bit; and when I
encounter a soft character, there’s also part of me in it,” says Zhang. “There
are aspects of me in each of my characters.” Does she perhaps agree that the
filmmakers look to be especially keen to cast her in insubordinate roles?
“Actually, many of the roles highlight the greatness of women. It’s as simple as
that. So…” She hesitates briefly, before flashing a rare glimpse of the
cockiness – the only instance in this interview – that has allegedly earned her
a myriad of detractors: “Perhaps that’s why I’m always [the directors’] first
choice.”
It’s not anyone’s fault that she just happens to be correct. Trained as a dancer
since the age of 11, Zhang spent six years honing her skills in traditional
Chinese dance and, for a short period, classical ballet. However, as she has
said in numerous past interviews, and again here, she knew she didn’t have a
future in dance. “It was just a feeling I had then. When I look back at it now,
I see that I was right,” she says. “It was right for me to change my profession
[from dance to acting]. I feel great happiness when I act and I don’t have this
same pleasure when I dance.” In reality, the transition was made a whole lot
smoother when she caught the eye of the pre-eminent Chinese filmmaker Zhang
Yimou, who was auditioning actors for a commercial he was directing at the time.
Her first starring role, at the age of 19, came swiftly afterwards in the
director’s Silver Berlin Bear-winning drama The Road Home (1999).
“That period was the best time of my life – and it was captured on film,” Zhang
says fondly of her movingly innocent performance in that film. “The ‘me’ at the
time, at that age: it’s a state that couldn’t be replicated. It’s impossible to
act like that and it’s impossible to repeat that. Let me put it this way: I can
no longer act in that movie today. It was a very natural movie with minimal
traces of acting there.” I ask Zhang if she could have predicted her
transformation from that authentic 19-year-old to the glamorous international
movie star she is today. “Things just happened naturally,” she says casually,
attempting to convey the spontaneity of her overnight success. “That is, I
hadn’t planned my career path. After I made The Road Home, I took part in
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000), and after that I made Rush Hour 2 (2001).
It happened quickly and one followed another.”
In person, Zhang is amiable and soft-spoken, possessing a somewhat girly voice.
She fiddles with my name card throughout much of our interview until she finally
puts it down to sip some water through a thin straw. Dressed in an elegant white
dress with sparkling sleeves, her long, tidy hair styled to curve dramatically
below her shoulders, Zhang has a lithe and slender frame which belies the
physical prowess that has seen her excel in arguably all the most globally
acclaimed martial arts films since the turn of the century. Does it still
surprise the actress that she’s accumulated such an impressive roster of movies
on her CV? “I haven’t thought about that. But if you put it this way… I guess it
may possibly be the case,” she says with a sheepish smile. “Especially [Ang
Lee’s] Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, [Zhang Yimou’s] Hero (2002) and House of
Flying Daggers (2004): each of these three movies has its own special
characteristics.”
In the years since House of the Flying Daggers, Zhang has added two more
Hollywood titles (2005’s Memoirs of a Geisha, 2009’s Horsemen) to her oeuvre
(after playing a villain in Rush Hour 2), worked with three more prominent
Chinese directors (Feng Xiaogang for 2006’s The Banquet, Chen Kaige for 2008’s
Forever Enthralled, and Gu Changwei for 2011’s Love for Life), and co-produced
and starred in the romantic comedy Sophie’s Revenge (2009), which already has a
prequel – again co-produced by Zhang – on the way. It is, however, her
artistically resonant, if not remotely prolific, working relationship with the
Hong Kong auteur Wong Kar-wai, beginning with the heart-wrenching romantic drama
2046 (2004), that has contributed most to her credentials as a future arthouse
great. Among the range of feverish compliments she has received for the role,
which include the Best Actress recognition at the Hong Kong Film Awards, is New
York Times film critic Manohla Dargis’ remark that ‘Zhang’s shockingly intense
performance burns a hole in the film’.
2046 also marked Zhang’s introduction to Wong’s notorious insistence in working
to his own rhythms – the film took years to make, before hastily making its
Cannes Film Festival premiere with an unfinished cut that, as legend has it, was
delivered directly from the film laboratory to the theatre. But if that
experience gave Zhang pause to reconsider working with the director, she isn’t
showing it. After their collaboration on 2046, itself a long and languorous
production, the two have developed ‘a close relationship’, especially after they
spent more than two weeks together at Cannes 2006, where Wong headed the jury
and Zhang served as one of the jurors. “After that, [Wong] was no longer just a
director to me, but became a mentor and a friend,” says Zhang, who describes her
experience with the director as being ‘like two master fighters trading moves’.
“No matter the process and result, [Wong Kar-wai] is a master. He’s the one and
only. Therefore, we really don’t mind if he gave us a script or not. If you
trust a person, you just let him manage it.”
Zhang is known for the exceptional care she puts into choosing the right movie
roles, although Wong’s projects stand head and shoulders above the rest on her
wishlist. “The selection mainly depends on whether a character moves me,” she
says, before quickly adding, “except [when it’s a film by] Wong Kar-wai, whom
I’d say yes to even without a script.” In fact, as Zhang confirms, The
Grandmaster has no script: “For me, it’s all about trust. Our method of working
together is indeed very unique. It’s during the shoots that we build up our
characters and the relationship [between Tony Leung’s role and mine].
“In the earliest stage, my character had a lot of scenes in which she would show
her emotions,” Zhang goes on. “For example, when she heard of her father’s
death, she was very sad and cried. But through this process, we both realised
that the character is a staunch figure that would not often show her emotions.
So in the end, a lot of the crying scenes turned out to be a waste of my tears;
those scenes had to be handled again in a different way. Through the performance
itself, we kept on finding the direction and personality of the character.” So
can the audience assume that the bulk of the footage included in Wong’s
completed films was from the latter stages of his lengthy shooting schedules?
“You really know him well,” replies Zhang playfully, giggling.
For The Grandmaster project, which Wong began to develop over a decade ago and
finally entered production in 2009, all three of the lead actors – Zhang, Tony
Leung and Chang Chen – were required by the director to train in their
character’s respective school of martial arts and find the ‘essence’ – and not
just the superficial look – of their craft. “The Grandmaster is different [from
other similar films] in that it goes deeper into the realm of martial arts,
exploring the meaning behind it all. It’s an altogether different kind of
exploration,” says Zhang. “Wong wanted us to exude the essence, the aura and the
charisma of the real martial artists. It’d have been impossible to achieve if we
had only trained for three or five days; that’s why we spent such a long time
training seriously. The strongest impression I got from the experience is how it
has changed my life values and way of thinking. The training gave me a sense of
tranquillity – it allows me to think before taking action.”
China hasn’t seen an actress as equally treasured and disliked as Zhang Ziyi for
a very long time. Edmund Lee visits The Grandmaster star in Beijing to hear
about her musings on Wong Kar-wai, the essence of acting and all those clueless
haters out there.
At one point during our interview in a photo studio in Sanlitun, Beijing, with
the first December snow descending on the capital, Zhang Ziyi describes herself
as an ‘old school’ actress who ‘thinks in the traditional way’. “There are many
people who take the less proper paths to look for their own sense of being,” she
adds. “That’s how the environment [of show business] is – it’s not a very clean
environment.” The truth is, as one of her country’s greatest current movie
icons, Zhang must also live with the same time-honoured traditions of
superstardom that hark back to the time of Ruan Lingyu nearly a century ago:
putting up a defiant face on screen, confronting uber-sensational scandals off
it, and juggling not gentle admiration and polite indifference but love and
hatred by even the most casual observers day in and day out, year after year.
It is, indeed, extraordinary to think that the 33-year-old Beijing-born actress
is already commanding an even higher international profile, and facing far more
outrageous slanders, than Ruan ever experienced – even with the latter’s famous
last words ‘gossip is a fearful thing’. “There are only two sides to one’s
personality: it’s either tough or soft,” Zhang says, almost nonchalantly, when
asked about her consistently strong-minded screen persona that can, no doubt,
find roots inside the actress herself. The list of such roles is set to grow one
longer with the expected January 10 local release – if we’re lucky – of Wong
Kar-wai’s 1930s-set martial arts drama The Grandmaster, which has also been
chosen to open the Berlin International Film Festival on February 7. In it,
Zhang makes her latest star turn as the emotionally unflinching daughter of a
respected leader in the martial arts world, who is caught between her admiration
for the real-life Wing Chun master Ip Man (Tony Leung Chiu-wai) and her duty to
her father’s legacy after his passing.
“When I encounter a tough character, it resembles me a little bit; and when I
encounter a soft character, there’s also part of me in it,” says Zhang. “There
are aspects of me in each of my characters.” Does she perhaps agree that the
filmmakers look to be especially keen to cast her in insubordinate roles?
“Actually, many of the roles highlight the greatness of women. It’s as simple as
that. So…” She hesitates briefly, before flashing a rare glimpse of the
cockiness – the only instance in this interview – that has allegedly earned her
a myriad of detractors: “Perhaps that’s why I’m always [the directors’] first
choice.”
It’s not anyone’s fault that she just happens to be correct. Trained as a dancer
since the age of 11, Zhang spent six years honing her skills in traditional
Chinese dance and, for a short period, classical ballet. However, as she has
said in numerous past interviews, and again here, she knew she didn’t have a
future in dance. “It was just a feeling I had then. When I look back at it now,
I see that I was right,” she says. “It was right for me to change my profession
[from dance to acting]. I feel great happiness when I act and I don’t have this
same pleasure when I dance.” In reality, the transition was made a whole lot
smoother when she caught the eye of the pre-eminent Chinese filmmaker Zhang
Yimou, who was auditioning actors for a commercial he was directing at the time.
Her first starring role, at the age of 19, came swiftly afterwards in the
director’s Silver Berlin Bear-winning drama The Road Home (1999).
“That period was the best time of my life – and it was captured on film,” Zhang
says fondly of her movingly innocent performance in that film. “The ‘me’ at the
time, at that age: it’s a state that couldn’t be replicated. It’s impossible to
act like that and it’s impossible to repeat that. Let me put it this way: I can
no longer act in that movie today. It was a very natural movie with minimal
traces of acting there.” I ask Zhang if she could have predicted her
transformation from that authentic 19-year-old to the glamorous international
movie star she is today. “Things just happened naturally,” she says casually,
attempting to convey the spontaneity of her overnight success. “That is, I
hadn’t planned my career path. After I made The Road Home, I took part in
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000), and after that I made Rush Hour 2 (2001).
It happened quickly and one followed another.”
In person, Zhang is amiable and soft-spoken, possessing a somewhat girly voice.
She fiddles with my name card throughout much of our interview until she finally
puts it down to sip some water through a thin straw. Dressed in an elegant white
dress with sparkling sleeves, her long, tidy hair styled to curve dramatically
below her shoulders, Zhang has a lithe and slender frame which belies the
physical prowess that has seen her excel in arguably all the most globally
acclaimed martial arts films since the turn of the century. Does it still
surprise the actress that she’s accumulated such an impressive roster of movies
on her CV? “I haven’t thought about that. But if you put it this way… I guess it
may possibly be the case,” she says with a sheepish smile. “Especially [Ang
Lee’s] Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, [Zhang Yimou’s] Hero (2002) and House of
Flying Daggers (2004): each of these three movies has its own special
characteristics.”
In the years since House of the Flying Daggers, Zhang has added two more
Hollywood titles (2005’s Memoirs of a Geisha, 2009’s Horsemen) to her oeuvre
(after playing a villain in Rush Hour 2), worked with three more prominent
Chinese directors (Feng Xiaogang for 2006’s The Banquet, Chen Kaige for 2008’s
Forever Enthralled, and Gu Changwei for 2011’s Love for Life), and co-produced
and starred in the romantic comedy Sophie’s Revenge (2009), which already has a
prequel – again co-produced by Zhang – on the way. It is, however, her
artistically resonant, if not remotely prolific, working relationship with the
Hong Kong auteur Wong Kar-wai, beginning with the heart-wrenching romantic drama
2046 (2004), that has contributed most to her credentials as a future arthouse
great. Among the range of feverish compliments she has received for the role,
which include the Best Actress recognition at the Hong Kong Film Awards, is New
York Times film critic Manohla Dargis’ remark that ‘Zhang’s shockingly intense
performance burns a hole in the film’.
2046 also marked Zhang’s introduction to Wong’s notorious insistence in working
to his own rhythms – the film took years to make, before hastily making its
Cannes Film Festival premiere with an unfinished cut that, as legend has it, was
delivered directly from the film laboratory to the theatre. But if that
experience gave Zhang pause to reconsider working with the director, she isn’t
showing it. After their collaboration on 2046, itself a long and languorous
production, the two have developed ‘a close relationship’, especially after they
spent more than two weeks together at Cannes 2006, where Wong headed the jury
and Zhang served as one of the jurors. “After that, [Wong] was no longer just a
director to me, but became a mentor and a friend,” says Zhang, who describes her
experience with the director as being ‘like two master fighters trading moves’.
“No matter the process and result, [Wong Kar-wai] is a master. He’s the one and
only. Therefore, we really don’t mind if he gave us a script or not. If you
trust a person, you just let him manage it.”
Zhang is known for the exceptional care she puts into choosing the right movie
roles, although Wong’s projects stand head and shoulders above the rest on her
wishlist. “The selection mainly depends on whether a character moves me,” she
says, before quickly adding, “except [when it’s a film by] Wong Kar-wai, whom
I’d say yes to even without a script.” In fact, as Zhang confirms, The
Grandmaster has no script: “For me, it’s all about trust. Our method of working
together is indeed very unique. It’s during the shoots that we build up our
characters and the relationship [between Tony Leung’s role and mine].
“In the earliest stage, my character had a lot of scenes in which she would show
her emotions,” Zhang goes on. “For example, when she heard of her father’s
death, she was very sad and cried. But through this process, we both realised
that the character is a staunch figure that would not often show her emotions.
So in the end, a lot of the crying scenes turned out to be a waste of my tears;
those scenes had to be handled again in a different way. Through the performance
itself, we kept on finding the direction and personality of the character.” So
can the audience assume that the bulk of the footage included in Wong’s
completed films was from the latter stages of his lengthy shooting schedules?
“You really know him well,” replies Zhang playfully, giggling.
For The Grandmaster project, which Wong began to develop over a decade ago and
finally entered production in 2009, all three of the lead actors – Zhang, Tony
Leung and Chang Chen – were required by the director to train in their
character’s respective school of martial arts and find the ‘essence’ – and not
just the superficial look – of their craft. “The Grandmaster is different [from
other similar films] in that it goes deeper into the realm of martial arts,
exploring the meaning behind it all. It’s an altogether different kind of
exploration,” says Zhang. “Wong wanted us to exude the essence, the aura and the
charisma of the real martial artists. It’d have been impossible to achieve if we
had only trained for three or five days; that’s why we spent such a long time
training seriously. The strongest impression I got from the experience is how it
has changed my life values and way of thinking. The training gave me a sense of
tranquillity – it allows me to think before taking action.”
‘Thinking before action’, as it turns out, also reflects how Zhang has picked
her projects over her eclectic career. The actress confesses that she only began
to realise she wanted to make acting her career while shooting Hero – long after
her sensational start with the equally revered The Road Home and Crouching
Tiger, Hidden Dragon. Her sustained success since, however, has been no
accident. “[Before Hero], it was simply a case of opportunities knocking, so I
went with them,” she says. “I didn’t especially feel that I was going to make
acting my career. But gradually, after making film after film, I discovered that
I was indeed passionate about acting. Every new role has unique aspects that
only belong to that character. Every new character is like that, which is what
makes [acting] interesting to start with.
“You don’t need to bring your past experience to your character. In fact, every
time I make a new film, I try to leave behind the experiences from, or
techniques I’ve developed in, my past projects,” Zhang continues. “It’s becoming
more and more difficult though, because your skills become more mature and you
start to rely on them, rather than relying on your feelings. It’s quite hard to
control this… you know what I mean? It’s when you don’t know [anything about
acting] that you act most naturally, that everything is from your heart.” Zhang
then offers an insight into her understanding of a great performance: “I think
the most touching roles come from the heart. There isn’t a ‘best performance’,
because the best performance is no longer just a performance. The most
captivating performance is actually the [actor’s] most authentic state. It takes
that to touch [the audience], and it’s not something you can replicate.”
Despite her rapid rise to fame internationally, Zhang’s breakthrough in
Hollywood resembles more of a wakeup call than her ultimate calling. “To me, it
was just a new and different experience,” she says of her Hollywood roles. “I
don’t think they have had that much of an impact [on my career]. If I were to
make another [Hollywood film], I hope it’ll bring a new challenge, with a role
that is not merely typecasting. Otherwise, it’s not very meaningful to me.” The
actress also admits to being ultra-selective when it comes to her Hollywood
projects. Says Zhang: “There have been many offers, but I turned them all down
because” – a short pause – “I’m an actress after all. I want to play characters
that I’m interested in. I don’t want to give up on my [artistic] pursuit for the
opportunity of Hollywood. As an actor, it also doesn’t mean much to me to play
just a bit part. It’s not going to elevate my [status] or help improve my art.”
The rather trivial dents on her career these frivolous Hollywood offers could
have are one thing. But in recent months, Zhang has suffered from a
significantly more damaging kind of international exposure. While unfounded
allegations and accusations against Zhang have been an unwelcome fixture
throughout her career, none came as viciously as the media reports in May last
year that she had allegedly been paid about US$110m to sleep with former
Communist Party politburo Bo Xilai and other government officials, in the period
between 2007 and 2011. The allegations originated from a US-based Chinese
website, were picked up by Hong Kong tabloid Apple Daily and, with Zhang’s legal
actions, promptly spread around the world. “It’s constantly the case in Hong
Kong,” Zhang says of her malicious detractors. Her profound distrust of our
media is palpable. “I guess I’ve never been very close to the Hong Kong media,
so they’re more inclined to quote me out of context or fabricate stories from
photos. I guess that’s what they do. But, in my case, I feel that they are just
relentless,” she says, letting out a bitter chuckle. “They always like to make
up stories about me.”
In addition to the unseemly media treatment, over the years Zhang has also
collected a considerable mass of cynics who have been all too willing to vocally
criticise her success. So what does she think of them? “I haven’t thought about
this especially,” Zhang says slowly. “First of all, I don’t think every person
understands movies or movie-making. There are many people who live in a
different world with a different worldview. That is just a fact. Maybe they need
to see you everyday at home on television to feel close to you and to appreciate
you, but I work in a very different world. So you can’t expect everyone to
appreciate you.”
With the impending release of The Grandmaster, which has all the hallmarks of a
great Wong Kar-wai effort (the lush and entrancing visuals, the unconsummated
feelings, the repeatedly postponed release date), Zhang, at least for the time
being, finally has something positive to look forward to. As our interview draws
to a close, after questions about her haters and accusers have seemingly sucked
out her last traces of energy, Zhang says privately: “I can feel that you do
really like film.” It doesn’t come across as a remark aimed at flattery. Rather,
it seems that, perhaps these days, the greatest Chinese actress of her
generation has simply become so overwhelmed by the hassles of fame that people
no longer remember to ask her about the films anymore.
The Grandmaster 一代宗師 opens on Thu Jan 10.
http://www.timeout.com.hk/film/features/55100/zhang-ziyi.html
Chang Chen
Posted: 2 Jan 2013
Timeout Hong Kong | Film Features
As if his romance with Zhang Ziyi’s character wasn’t unfortunate enough in
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, Chang Chen is tempting fate again in The
Grandmaster. Interview by Edmund Lee.
How do you think Zhang Ziyi has changed since you worked on Crouching Tiger,
Hidden Dragon together?
I think Ziyi is very different now. Crouching Tiger was such a long time ago.
She was more like a little girl back then; she’s a mature woman now. I’ve
watched many of her films over the years and I think her [acting] range is very
broad. She’s an actress who’s really capable of catching the audience’s
eyesight. She may be a rather vivacious person but she’s always completely
focused on the set. She’s excellent to work with.
So what’s your collaboration like this time?
We have many scenes together. One of the key scenes is about how our characters
meet each other for the very first time. That scene was interesting to me
because it’s my first proper scene for The Grandmaster. My understanding of the
characters was not that precise at the time – you know, when you make a Wong
Kar-wai film you’re constantly adjusting your status and looking for the right
feelings as you go along – and this scene with Ziyi really established my
character in the film. It was very memorable also because it’s shot in the very
cold Northeast [China], and it’s my professional reunion with Ziyi after so many
years.
In The Grandmaster, do the two of you have to fight each other or are you only
involved in romantic scenes?
There are only romantic scenes [between us].
Would you describe the film as a romance at heart?
I think Wong’s films are always relatively romantic. It’s not just love but also
feelings between people, which may [also] be intimate or romantic.
From what you know, will there be a love triangle or quadrangle in the film?
I won’t be surprised if there is! [Laughs] As I haven’t seen [the finished film]
yet I can’t tell for sure – but I won’t be surprised.
What’s the most memorable part about working with Wong once again?
I think coming into a film project of his, we’ve all expected it to be a very
tough experience. [But] I’m the kind of person who likes to conquer any
challenge: you give me a mountain and I’ll climb to the top.
As one of his regular actors, did you actually have an idea how long the
production was going to last?
I didn’t know it would take as long as three years. [Laughs] I honestly feel
that this production is quite lengthy. I didn’t anticipate a certain production
length but I did hope that he could have gotten all the quality footage he
wanted as soon as possible. Unlike other directors, Wong makes a lot of
amendments when he’s filming. Nobody has an idea how long the shoot is going to
last or what the film is going to look like!
The Grandmaster 一代宗師 opens on Thu Jan 10.
http://www.timeout.com.hk/film/features/55455/chang-chen.html