Taiwan filmmakers sees hope from Ang Lee's success (Reuters) Updated: 2006-02-12 09:40
As "Brokeback Mountain," Ang Lee's tale of gay cowboys, tops the Oscar
nominations and fills the theatres, film makers back home in Taiwan hope to
emulate his success to rescue their ailing movie industry.
Last year,
Taiwan films accounted for just 10 percent of the 400-plus movies shown on the
island and just 1.59 percent of ticket sales.
But the success of Lee's edgy cowboy romance, nominated for best movie and
seven other Academy Awards, has grossed US$1 million in ticket sales in Taiwan
and inspired young filmmakers anew.
"I am very glad Ang Lee is so successful that I can use him as an excuse
whenever my mom tells me to find a real job," said Robin Lee, a 33-year-old with
a biology masters degree who prefers to make movies.
Taiwan directors win awards on the international movie festival circuit but
struggle to make money as their home audiences see their work as irrelevant or
just plain boring.
Although they flocked to Ang Lee's Oscar-winning "Crouching Tiger, Hidden
Dragon" in 2000, Taiwan movie goers have generally preferred Hong Kong kung fu
action or the Hollywood dream machine to local movies that typically take a
studied and quiet look at love and life on the island.
But local film-makers now hope to emulate Lee's ability to skilfully combine
Eastern philosophy with popular Western storytelling, without compromising his
art.
"Ang Lee's success shows it is not impossible to strike a balance between art
and box office," said Lin Chien-ping, who took a trophy for his short film,
"Small Station," at the Venice International Film Festival in 2005.
"It doesn't make sense for any director to make self-serving movies with no
commercial appeal. There are plenty of good movies that touch the hearts of
audiences and also make money," the 38-year-old director said.
Taiwan's "New Cinema" began to win recognition in the 1980s when directors
like Hou Hsiao-hsien and Tsai Ming-liang won prizes from Berlin, Cannes and
Venice, but they lost box office appeal when their focus shifted from
entertainment to pure art.
"You have to travel abroad to find out how well-regarded Taiwan (art house)
movies and directors are. But at home, nobody pays any attention," said Leste
Chen, a 24-year-old director, who made his debut with a ghost movie last year.
"But the good thing is Taiwan's movie industry can't be any worse than it is
now. On the other hand, if the industry was booming, we would not have had a
chance," said Chen.
The hunger for success means the young Taiwan directors of today are more
focused on the box office.
"I want to make movies that are different, interesting and I want people to
watch my movies," said Robin Lee, whose first film, "The Shoe Fairy," was due to
be shown later this month.
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