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Ang Lee with James Schamus: East Meets Western
James Schamus
September 2005
James Schamus
September 2005
Over the course of nine movies Ang has lived up to the injunction of the final, repeated word of his very first feature, Pushing Hands: “Nothing.” Why is nothing so important in his movies? Because it’s not just nothing, it’s nothing in particular. An Ang Lee hero, be he or she the Hulk or an unruly teenage girl martial artist, prepares for his or her leap into the void through the careful study of rocks, calligraphic strokes, and comic books, through the practice and discipline of shoplifting, cooking, or tending sheep. Every detail of an Ang Lee movie is an object of fascinating, absorptive power, and only through the experience of its particularity can we educate ourselves for the nothing that is our destiny.
That is why it is a great pleasure to see Ang being honored by the Walker Art Center. For if Ang has succeeded, he will be honored precisely for nothing, nothing at all.
—James Schamus
James Scamus is a film producer and screenwriter who has coproduced all of Ang Lee’s films in addition to many other award-winning independent features. He is the copresident of Focus Features and a professor at Columbia University.
Related Links
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Film critics speak out on Regis Dialogue filmmakers http://blogs.walkerart.org/filmvideo/?p=103 Walker blogs, Film / Video: General | |
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Regis Dialogue and Film Retrospective http://filmvideo.walkerart.org/detail.wac?id=2491&title=Regis%20Dialogues | |