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Director

Original

Wayne Wang

Born in Hong Kong and based in America, director Wayne Wang studied photography, film, TV and painting in the US before landing several directorial assignments in his homeland (these included the Chinese episodes of Robert Clouse’s “The Golden Needles” in 1974 and a popular TV show based on “All in the Family”). He returned to the US and scraped together $22,000 to complete “Chan is Missing” (1982), a hip, Zen-inspired San Francisco detective story which also carefully dissected prevailing Oriental stereotypes. This landmark independent film became a critical and commercial success for its rare, authentic slice of Asian-American life in a sometimes wildly comic narrative that straddled genres. The film remains an inspirational touchstone for Asian-American filmmakers attempting to get their voices heard in the American cinema.

Wang’s second film, “Dim Sum: A Little Bit of Heart” (1984), again centered on San Francisco’s Chinese-American community. The film playfully yet poignantly… read more

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Picture of Uli Cain, Cinefidel¹³

Uli Cain, Cinefidel¹³

14Jul10

A good film, but not perfect. A interesting perfromance by Irons, and a really nice look and a contemporarily dressed Gong Li.

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Interesting Perspective

By MidLeve​ls on April 23, 2013

‘Of course it wasn’t just the deals..’
Jeremy Irons does a bit of voice-over in this film which makes it A++.
Writing credits – Jean-Claude Carrière, Wayne Wang, Larry Gross and Paul Theroux…  read review

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