John Woo got tired of making big budget movies and went back to his roots with the action thriller Manhunt. Expect doves, motorbikes, balletic gunplay and corny dialogue. I caught up with him at the Venice Film Festival following the film's premiere.
How
do you feel about being referred to as legendary by your fans?
"I'm
not a legend, I'm just a filmmaker. Thank you, anyway. I like film
and I'm not trying to be humble when I say I'm still a student. I
like to learn from world cinema. I can learn so many things by
watching all kinds of movies."
The
beginning and end of Manhunt
are steeped in nostalgia for classic cinema. Does this reflect how
you feel today?
"Yeah,
I like the old-time movies. 1960s and 1970s were the best years for
cinema. There were so many great masters and so many great movies,
and so many great creations - they give us so much inspiration. Now
movies seem a bit empty. I love European films, though. I think
they're much better than Hollywood."
The
original Manhunt
movie from 1976 was very serious, very masculine, and you have added
a lot of humour and two female assassins. What
was the thinking behind your version?
"Since
we couldn't get the rights to the old movie we made it from the
original novel [Hot Pursuit by Juko Nishimura]. It's got the same
storyline, but because we couldn't do anything from the old movie it
allowed us to make up some new scenes and gave us so much freedom. We
could do whatever we liked and I used it to go back to my old style.
The original movie was a little too serious; I like to make action
with more comedy."
You
do seem to be consciously looking back to your early films here,
perhaps referencing The
Killer
and Hard
Boiled.
Did you make Manhunt
for
your fans?
"For
the fans, and also for myself. I had made too many big-budget movies
and I got fed up. When a few of my big-budget movies became hits, I
became established as a big-budget film director, and I never liked
it. The more money you get the more pressure you have, and it takes
away the joy of making films. All you do is deal with the numbers,
with the budget, and it's no fun. Everybody kept saying about 'the
numbers, the numbers', and it wasn't about the shot any more. I hated
it. I wanted to go back to a much smaller kind of film and do
something like The
Killer:
a thriller. With Manhunt
I had more creative freedom to do that."
So
did you fall out of love with filmmaking for a while and need to find
a way to fall back in love with it?
"Yes,
and I did it with this film. And future projects will do the same
thing. So my next project is an American production and kind of like
a Killer-type
story. We're going to be shooting in European countries."
You
made Manhunt
in
Japan. Was it a good place to work?
"I
love the Japanese crews. We used 90 per cent Japanese on the film.
They are very professional. They can work 12-16 hours a day without
any complaint. They enjoy the filmmaking and also are very warm, but
sometimes it is very hard to tell what they are thinking, because
their expression doesn't change. I was so amazed about the people
there, though. When we needed a lot of extras for big scenes, people
volunteered. And they brought in their own costumes, no matter what
kind of scene. I was so moved. But I would say it's not easy to shoot
a movie in Japan because there's so many rules. It's hard to shoot
any scene on a busy street. Even a little busy street, we had to
shoot a scene in different places."
Manhunt
feels like a John Woo greatest hits movie. There's car chases, knife
fights, fist fights, people on motorcycles, doves. Is there any
particular action scene that you especially liked doing?
"I
like the jet ski chase on the river and the two men with two guns.
When they are handcuffed together and have only got one hand left and
they're each holding a gun and shooting at the same time, it looks
pretty much like one man with two guns."
How
do you work with your action choreographer? Were the scenes you
mentioned your idea?
"Mostly
they're my idea. When I was younger I choreographed all the action by
myself. I could jump up on the table and dive on the ground. In the
old time, for some of the Hong Kong movies, some directors, when they
didn't know how to shoot the action, they gave the scene to the
action director to do it, and it became two different styles. I
didn't want to see that happen in my films so I controlled everything
and designed everything. Even the camera work and editing, I did it
all myself. In the meantime I still cared about my actors. The
actors I've worked with, like Chow Yun Fat and John Travolta, none of
them was a real fighter. Tom Cruise was a little better. And Nicolas
Cage. But I still care about the image, how they hold a gun, how they
fight, what they wear, and I did it all by myself because I know how
to make actors look good. I know how to create a hero. So that's why
I needed to care about everything. I even designed the action for the
female heroes."
After
Manhunt
I would love to see a James Bond movie directed by you.
"You
know, I really have been thinking about making one, if I have a
chance. I met the producer many, many years ago. They were interested
in me making one, but somehow I didn't. But I am still looking
for it. I really love James Bond."
You
have a scene with doves in
Manhunt, which
I
first saw years ago in your film The
Killer.
What first inspired you to use doves, and do they mean anything?
"It
was by coincidence. When we were shooting the ending scene [for The
Killer]
on a church set, the movie was so heroic and so romantic that I just
tried to find a way to show the true spirit of the two guys - the cop
and the killer. They both had been misunderstood by the world, so I
thought about what kind of montage shot I could use to show their
real heart. All of a sudden I said, 'Oh, let's get some white doves.
When our hero is being shot, or dying or something, I will cut in to
the white dove flying over a candle, and when the two shots are
linked together, it will let the audience feel their real hearts. It
will be beautiful.' It worked pretty well, but it wasn't easy to
shoot. We did one shot and the doves flew away. So we had to buy new
ones every day. Anyway the shot was so good, it became one of my
trademarks."
Before
you made films, you actually wanted to become a Christian minister.
Is there a connection with the doves there, too?
"Yes.
In the old time, when I was younger, I worked with a church. Every
week there was a new theme and I used to draw the poster for them,
and I usually used a white dove as a main theme."
In
Manhunt
the hero is a lawyer. What do you know about these people?
"I
have a good lawyer friend, and of course I know the business. But for
our new story, using a lawyer meant we wouldn't get into trouble with
the politics, like if we made him a military guy. The main thing for
me in the film is the friendship. I tried to send a message that even
though we come from different cultures, and there's something unhappy
between the Japanese and Chinese, we can work together. That's why I
shot it in a humorous and fun way. I tried not to take things too
seriously. Life is too short. We should find a way to appreciate each
other, not hate each other."
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