"I always compare filmmaking to cooking. Shooting is like buying the
groceries. You buy all kinds of ingredients and the better ingredients
you get, the better chance you have of making the movie you want."--Ang
Lee, from Speaking in Images
Speaking in Images offers an engaging and rare collection of
interviews with the directors who have changed the face of Chinese and
international cinema. Michael Berry's discussions with such directors as
Ang Lee (Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon), Zhang Yimou (Hero), Chen
Kaige (Farewell My Concubine), Stanley Kwan (Lan Yu), Tsai
Ming-Liang (Vive l'Amour), Edward Yang (Yi Yi), and Hou Hsiao-hsien
(Flowers of Shanghai) offer an eclectic and comprehensive portrait of
contemporary Chinese cinema.
In interviews that capture each filmmaker's unique vision, the subjects
discuss their formative years, the ideas and influences that shaped
their work, film aesthetics, battles with censors and studios, the
mingling of commercial and art film, and the future of Chinese cinema in
a transnational context. Berry's introduction to the collection provides
an overview of Chinese cinema in the second half of the twentieth
century, placing the directors and their work in a wider historical and
cultural context.