BEIJING, May 24 -- Ang Lee and James Schamus have two
of the best jobs on the planet.
Lee gets to direct films ranging from Academy Award
winners ("Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" and "Brokeback Mountain") to superhero
tales ("Hulk") to the sexually explicit thriller "Lust, Caution."
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Director Ang Lee (L) and American
screenwriter and producer James Schamus are on site last week at the 62nd
International Film Festival in Cannes, southern France.(Photo Source:
Shanghai Daily/by David Azia) Photo
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Schamus,
Lee's writing and producing partner, is a Hollywood rarity, a writer who wields
power as head of his own production and distribution outfit.
So when Lee came to Schamus with his latest idea -
the Cannes Film Festival entry "Taking Woodstock," a behind-the-scenes look at
the 1969 rock music love-in - they were off and running in an instant.
"I got back to him right away. I was like, 'let's do
this one'," Schamus said in Cannes last week. "I was actually writing the
screenplay here at Cannes last year. So it's weird to be back here a year
later."
The two have been working together since Lee's first
film, 1992's "Pushing Hands," produced through Good Machine, a production
company Schamus co-founded.
Since then, Schamus has had producing or writing
credits on most of Lee's films, among them "The Wedding Banquet," "Sense and
Sensibility," "Crouching Tiger" and "The Ice Storm," which earned Schamus the
screenplay prize at the 1997 Cannes festival.
Schamus' distribution banner - Focus Features, a unit
of NBC Universal - released "Brokeback Mountain" and is issuing "Taking
Woodstock" in August around the 40th anniversary of the concert.
After their frothy first films together, Lee went
into a dark patch, beginning with the sober domestic drama "The Ice Storm." The
tone stayed bleak for five more movies.
No cynicism
"It feels like I was in a deep abyss, so I had to
come out for a breath of fresh air," said Lee, who won the best-director Oscar
for "Brokeback Mountain." "Ever since the first one, 'The Ice Storm' 13 years
ago, I said, 'someday, I'm going to do a comedy, warm at heart, with no
cynicism'."
Schamus joked that Lee's mid-life crisis was "really
going on."
"It was like the line from Woody Allen. 'I like your
early, funny movies'," Schamus said. "I found myself saying that to Ang for like
a decade."
Lee finally listened after coming across Elliot
Tiber's memoir "Taking Woodstock," which chronicles the hurdles concert
organizers jumped to pull off the concert that drew half a million people to a
muddy farm in the Catskills.
"Crouching Tiger" was a rare foreign-language smash
hit in the United States and "Brokeback Mountain" was Focus Features'
top-grossing hit with 180 million U.S. dollars in ticket sales worldwide.
Yet Lee and Schamus had no qualms about moving on to
smaller productions such as "Lust, Caution" and "Taking Woodstock," even if
critics sniped they were slumming in art house films or little comedies.
"It's unfair, so I don't really care," Lee said.
"Nothing's more rewarding than making the movie you want to make. How good is
that? There's nothing to top that."
"Taking Woodstock" has no major box-office draws,
counting Liev Schreiber, Emile Hirsch, Eugene Levy and Imelda Staunton as its
best-known cast members. The film stars Demetri Martin as Elliot and also
features Henry Goodman, Paul Dano and Kelli Garner.
Even with no big stars, "Taking Woodstock" was a good
investment for Focus, Schamus said.
"I'm a very conservative businessman. I'm a petty
bourgeois. I am like a small businessman at heart," Schamus said, noting that
"Taking Woodstock" was shot on a tight budget, much of which has been recouped
from overseas sales. "So we only need very modest returns from the North
American side of it, for example, to be very happy."
Lee is not tied to making films with Focus and could
go off on a big studio flick if something came his way that he wanted to do. He
also could bring Schamus along as screenwriter on any films he might make
elsewhere.
While Lee is not sure what he might do next, Schamus
has some ideas.
"I actually have something to pitch to you later
today," he told Lee.
(Source: Shanghai Daily)