2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- Both informative and very entertaining, 13 April 2008
Author:
Michael Fargo from San Francisco
This film, at it's heart, is an expose on America itself and how it
both exploits and rewards minorities, ever so slowly adding them to the
mix of the American experience. The pay-off's come at the end with
frank testimonies from Joan Chen, B.D. Wong, and the amazing Ang Lee.
The final topper comes when the multi-faceted (and talented) Justin Lin
laughs that once he broke through the Hollywood "ceiling" he couldn't
get his films released in Asia because they weren't about white people.
Loads of archival footage surround the interviews (none expressing much
bitterness) with Nancy Kwan's beauty ever-shining, she is surprisingly
self-aware and candid about the negative stereotypes she was accused of
perpetuating. But this is less about the Chinese in Hollywood than
America itself: "...as long as you make money" is the creed, no matter
how damaging or ridiculous the job.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- An excellent doc, 14 September 2007
Author:
doug-697 from Canada
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
This is a fascinating documentary on Chinese people in Hollywood movies
from the earliest silent to present day. From incredible scenes of a
silent movie directed and acted by Chinese sisters to the making of Joy
Luck Club.
The Chinese actors and directors who talk about the depiction of
Chinese people throughout the history of Hollywood talk with
intelligence, compassion and anger. They don't hold back, but they are
also even-handed. For example, there was resentment that Charlie Chan
was not played by an Asian and that he spoke in "pigeon-English".
However, they also said that Charlie's family was a very positive
representations. The family as a whole was presented as warm and
loving, but especially that his son spoke perfect English, was
college-education and an Olympic athlete. But then there's Joan Chen
describing how she was given a dialogue coach in The Last Emperor to
help her speak English with a Chinese accent.
Also in the film, Christopher Lee talks about the Fu Manchu movies and
there's a segment which, if you're a Roger Ebert fan, you'll want to
see.
Before everybody was kung fu fighting, 22 June 2008
Author:
Chad Shiira from Mililani, Hawaii
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Paul Auster wrote a novel about an Argentinian-born silent screen,
comic star named Hector Mann called "The Book of Illusions"(published
in 2002) that haunted me for days on end after I reluctantly turned the
last page. A contemporary of screen legends such as Charlie Chaplin,
Buster Keaton, and Harold Lloyd; Auster, with his usual expert
cageyness, adroitly blurred the line between fact and fiction, making
the reader lose sight of Hector Mann's fictitious non-existence. When
the South American slapstick comic actor left Hollywood, he continued
to make films in secrecy at his own private movie studio. It was the
notion of a film history unbeknownst to the public sector that drove my
imagination, like an alternate universe.
In "Hollywood Chinese", the Auster novel came rushing back to my head
with an almost visceral immediateness, as this smart, incisive
documentary discloses the existence of a Chinese female director named
Marion Wong, who made silent films which accurately depicted
Chinese-American life at the advent of commercial motion picture
exhibition during the early tens. Clips from Wong's "The Curse of Quon
Gwon" possess an uncanny look of otherworldliness, like something that
shouldn't exist at all. What's truly remarkable about this lost film is
that it has value beyond its ethnographic qualities; Ms. Wong was
clearly an accomplished filmmaker in her own right.
"Hollywood Chinese" is admirable for its balance in representing both
sides of the controversy behind the creative casting procedures that
Hollywood regularly carried out in such films as Sidney Franklin's "The
Good Earth"(Caucasians playing Chinese) and "The Flower Drum
Song"(Japanese playing Chinese). On one hand, there's the reminder that
Hollywood is an industry, a business whose only goal is to turn a
profit, so it's nothing personal, asserts the interview subjects from
this camp, when a Anglo-American actor like Paul Muni puts on a yellow
face. But then there's the other camp who take issue with being
misrepresented, especially by Japanese actors, for instance, Miyoshi
Umeki in Henry Koster's "The Flower Drum Song", especially during the
post-WWII period, when the Chinese were subjected to Japanese
domination. Although there is anger, most notably by "M.
Butterfly"-star B.D. Wong concerning Gedde Watanabe's performance in
John Hughes' "Sixteen Candles", the anger is mostly held in check(there
is a little bitterness from actress Joan Chen when she recounts her
lack of film offers after Bernardo Bertolucci's "The Last Emperor").
The filmmaker shows tremendous restraint in not making mention of the
obvious irony behind Rob Marshall's "Memoirs of a Geisha", in which
Chinese actors played Japanese actors. Or maybe it's bias. "Memoirs of
a Geisha" strengthens the argument that Hollywood is about box office
receipts, and not cultural sensitivity, since the casting of Zhang Ziyi
and Michelle Yeoh as Japanese geishas was clearly a business-based
decision born out of economic necessity. There are simply no bankable
female Japanese stars.
Incidentally, Paul Auster co-wrote the screenplay for Wayne Wang's
"Smoke". "Hollywood Chinese" is a must-see for anybody who has an
interest in cultural studies.
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Hollywood Chinese (2007)
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-

Both informative and very entertaining, 13 April 2008
Author: Michael Fargo from San Francisco
This film, at it's heart, is an expose on America itself and how it both exploits and rewards minorities, ever so slowly adding them to the mix of the American experience. The pay-off's come at the end with frank testimonies from Joan Chen, B.D. Wong, and the amazing Ang Lee. The final topper comes when the multi-faceted (and talented) Justin Lin laughs that once he broke through the Hollywood "ceiling" he couldn't get his films released in Asia because they weren't about white people.
Loads of archival footage surround the interviews (none expressing much bitterness) with Nancy Kwan's beauty ever-shining, she is surprisingly self-aware and candid about the negative stereotypes she was accused of perpetuating. But this is less about the Chinese in Hollywood than America itself: "...as long as you make money" is the creed, no matter how damaging or ridiculous the job.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-

An excellent doc, 14 September 2007
Author: doug-697 from Canada
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
This is a fascinating documentary on Chinese people in Hollywood movies from the earliest silent to present day. From incredible scenes of a silent movie directed and acted by Chinese sisters to the making of Joy Luck Club.
The Chinese actors and directors who talk about the depiction of Chinese people throughout the history of Hollywood talk with intelligence, compassion and anger. They don't hold back, but they are also even-handed. For example, there was resentment that Charlie Chan was not played by an Asian and that he spoke in "pigeon-English". However, they also said that Charlie's family was a very positive representations. The family as a whole was presented as warm and loving, but especially that his son spoke perfect English, was college-education and an Olympic athlete. But then there's Joan Chen describing how she was given a dialogue coach in The Last Emperor to help her speak English with a Chinese accent.
Also in the film, Christopher Lee talks about the Fu Manchu movies and there's a segment which, if you're a Roger Ebert fan, you'll want to see.
Before everybody was kung fu fighting, 22 June 2008

Author: Chad Shiira from Mililani, Hawaii
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Paul Auster wrote a novel about an Argentinian-born silent screen, comic star named Hector Mann called "The Book of Illusions"(published in 2002) that haunted me for days on end after I reluctantly turned the last page. A contemporary of screen legends such as Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, and Harold Lloyd; Auster, with his usual expert cageyness, adroitly blurred the line between fact and fiction, making the reader lose sight of Hector Mann's fictitious non-existence. When the South American slapstick comic actor left Hollywood, he continued to make films in secrecy at his own private movie studio. It was the notion of a film history unbeknownst to the public sector that drove my imagination, like an alternate universe.
In "Hollywood Chinese", the Auster novel came rushing back to my head with an almost visceral immediateness, as this smart, incisive documentary discloses the existence of a Chinese female director named Marion Wong, who made silent films which accurately depicted Chinese-American life at the advent of commercial motion picture exhibition during the early tens. Clips from Wong's "The Curse of Quon Gwon" possess an uncanny look of otherworldliness, like something that shouldn't exist at all. What's truly remarkable about this lost film is that it has value beyond its ethnographic qualities; Ms. Wong was clearly an accomplished filmmaker in her own right.
"Hollywood Chinese" is admirable for its balance in representing both sides of the controversy behind the creative casting procedures that Hollywood regularly carried out in such films as Sidney Franklin's "The Good Earth"(Caucasians playing Chinese) and "The Flower Drum Song"(Japanese playing Chinese). On one hand, there's the reminder that Hollywood is an industry, a business whose only goal is to turn a profit, so it's nothing personal, asserts the interview subjects from this camp, when a Anglo-American actor like Paul Muni puts on a yellow face. But then there's the other camp who take issue with being misrepresented, especially by Japanese actors, for instance, Miyoshi Umeki in Henry Koster's "The Flower Drum Song", especially during the post-WWII period, when the Chinese were subjected to Japanese domination. Although there is anger, most notably by "M. Butterfly"-star B.D. Wong concerning Gedde Watanabe's performance in John Hughes' "Sixteen Candles", the anger is mostly held in check(there is a little bitterness from actress Joan Chen when she recounts her lack of film offers after Bernardo Bertolucci's "The Last Emperor").
The filmmaker shows tremendous restraint in not making mention of the obvious irony behind Rob Marshall's "Memoirs of a Geisha", in which Chinese actors played Japanese actors. Or maybe it's bias. "Memoirs of a Geisha" strengthens the argument that Hollywood is about box office receipts, and not cultural sensitivity, since the casting of Zhang Ziyi and Michelle Yeoh as Japanese geishas was clearly a business-based decision born out of economic necessity. There are simply no bankable female Japanese stars.
Incidentally, Paul Auster co-wrote the screenplay for Wayne Wang's "Smoke". "Hollywood Chinese" is a must-see for anybody who has an interest in cultural studies.
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