Okay,
so during the summer, I have a lot of free time that I tend to take advantage
of with copious movie-watching. Among my
numerous movie-watching pushes (MCU, Harry
Potter, Jane Austen) was a rewatch of Wong Kar-wai’s movies and,
incidentally, the other Chinese movies I own (Hero and Red Cliff, which
I lately reviewed.) Translation? I watched a lot of movies featuring Hong Kong actor/Wong Kar-wai’s favorite
person Tony Leung Chiu-wai.
As I
tend to do whenever I revisit one of Leung’s movies, I found myself being
bowled over afresh by what a tremendous actor he is. I thought, as I have before, “I’d love to see
him in a Hollywood film. I wonder why
he’s never been in one before?”
Now,
the official word on that, as per the interviews he does with U.S. reporters
whenever one of his movies gets a significant American release, is that he’s
waiting for the right role. But of
course, the idea behind that is much more loaded than simply being a matter of
picking the best film with which to make a Hollywood debut. Because around the same time as I was
watching these movies and thinking these thoughts, the first trailer for The Great Wall – a.k.a. Matt Damon
fights monsters in ancient China – came out.
And yes, I know, Chinese co-production, more complicated stuff at work,
we don’t know if Damon is actually
playing the lead role like the trailer suggests he does, I get all that. But riding
in on the back of Ghost in the Shell,
Doctor Strange, Aloha, and all that rest, while I was marinating in all this Hong
Kong excellence, I thought about The
Great Wall trailer more for the picture it paints and the depressing truth
it reveals. And even though I already knew this on an intellectual level, it
still hit me hard to think those words in clear block letters: Tony
Leung Chiu-wai has never done a Hollywood movie because Hollywood doesn’t have
a clue what it would do with him.
True,
there have been big-name Chinese actors with Hollywood careers in years past –
Jackie Chan and Jet Li are the main ones that spring to mind – but when it
comes to Asian movie stars getting
big work in the U.S. right now
(whether they’re from Asia or
America,) there are ludicrously-few to speak of, even though there absolutely
should be more. Since Harold & Kumar, all of John Cho’s
most substantial roles have been on television, not film, and TV similarly
offers meatier work to the likes of Constance Wu, Daniel Dae Kim, and Lucy Liu,
to name my favorites. I’d say maybe the
biggest Asian name in American movies is Rinko Kikuchi? In recent years, she’s had a sizable role in Pacific Rim and played the lead in Kumiko the Treasure Hunter. But the roles are few and far between.
I
started trying to think of major Hollywood releases that either featured
majority Asian casts or starred Asian leads.
In my absolutely non-scientific ponderings, I came up with fewer than a
dozen since 2000, including Memoirs of a
Geisha, Letters from Iwo Jima, the
Harold & Kumar movies, and the
Jackie Chan and Jet Li movies I could think of off the top of my head. I know I’ve missed some, but the point is
that there are very, very few. We’re still at a point where, when it comes
to major roles, an Asian actor is almost never going to be considered if the
part isn’t specifically written to be Asian, and Hollywood doesn’t have a whole
lot of interest in telling stories about Asian people (and, side note, on the
rare occasions that it does, it tends to tell stories in Asia rather than the
U.S.) Not to mention, the likes of
Scarlett Johansson, Tilda Swinton, Emma Stone, and others have shown us that,
even if a part is specifically meant
to be Asian, that still doesn’t mean it’ll actually go to an Asian actor.
Let’s
come back to Tony Leung Chiu-wai. If
you’re not familiar with him, he’s a big star in Hong Kong, a versatile leading
man/sex symbol. Granted, I’ve only seen
a small portion of his work (heavily weighted by Wong Kar-wai,) but I’ve seen
enough to know the wide range of films and roles that are open to him. Even just in my limited sample, he’s played
cops, journalists, husbands, assassins, playboys, soldiers, kung fu masters,
lovers, waylaid tourists. He’s played
gay characters. He’s played blind
characters (several times, in fact. Is
this something he’s known for, or does Chinese cinema just have a penchant for
movies about blind people?) He’s done
drama, comedy, action, romance, and wuxia, period pieces and contemporary.
Long
story short, he’s a terrific leading man.
He’s Bradley Cooper, or Leonardo DiCaprio (in Infernal Affairs, he originated the role Leo later played in its
remake, The Departed) – heck, he’s
Matt Damon. The Hong Kong film industry
is his oyster, and he has his pick of great roles. He’s frequently the star of the movies he’s
in, and when he’s not, it’s usually because his supporting role is just as cool
as the lead.
With
all that stardom, all that choice,
what does Hollywood have to offer him?
Which of his own movies could he have been cast in if they’d have been
made in Hollywood? In Hong Kong, he
doesn’t play the “Chinese” cop/soldier/lover.
It’s just cop. Soldier. Lover.
Just a person who, yes, is Chinese.
He doesn’t have to wait around for a part that needs to be Chinese or, barring that, take whatever parts are
insignificant enough that an Asian actor can be considered. Thinking of assorted leading-man roles that
have come out of Hollywood in recent years, I can come up with plenty that
Leung would’ve played the crap out of, but how many that he conceivably could
have been cast in?
Because
I’d rather do something positive than
think something depressing, I’ve
decided to channel that Hollywood frustration into expanding the small portion
of Leung’s films that I’ve seen. In part
because he’s amazing and rewatching him in so many films this summers made me
want to see more, and in part because I want to enjoy seeing him play the same
range of characters that are open to white leading men here in Hollywood. In terms of the blog, it won’t be a weekly
feature – immediately after the
summer isn’t an ideal time to start a new movie-watching push – but expect
periodic Leung-centric reviews in the vein of my Peter Capaldi reviews before
his debut as the Twelfth Doctor. Look
for them under the title “A Little TLC(w)” (‘cause it’s my blog, and I’ll give
my features dorky names if I want to.)
No comments:
Post a Comment