Acting
superstar Jiang Wen is probably still best known to Western
audiences for his role in Zhang Yimou's Red Sorghum,
and he follows his well-received directorial debut, In
The Heat Of The Sun, with Guizi Lai Le
(Devils On The Doorstep), an intriguing drama set
during the anti-Japanese war.
The
movie, co-adapted for the screen by Jiang with Wang Shuping
and Shi Jianquan, sees a group of Chinese soldiers abandoning
a Japanese prisoner and his interpreter in a small village.
The soldiers are meant to return in eight days but they
fail to show up leaving the villagers in a quandary.
They feel that they should kill the man, but no-one wants
to take responsibility for the action, so instead they
simply leave him alone. Various villagers befriend him,
until war shortages see the village run short of food.
So the villagers hatch a complex plan to kill their prisoner,
while he and his interpreter hatch an equally complex
plan to escape.
Devils
On The Doorstep has become the most eagerly anticipated
Chinese movie of the year, and word of mouth suggests
that it may very well live up to its expectations. The
tech credits are just as impressive ace cinematographer
Gu Changwei (Farewell My Concubine), whose
gentle lensing was responsible for much of In The
Heat Of The Sun's lazy, lackadaisical feel, shot
the film in atmospheric black and white.
Moving
Pictures exclusively interviewed Jiang Wen in Hong Kong.
MOVING
PICTURES: The idea of focusing on a Japanese soldier during
the Japanese invasion of China is a controversial one.
What drew you to this story?
JIANG
WEN: I do not like to avoid sensitive questions. Actually,
I think that only controversial and sensitive questions
can get to the heart of a problem. I am particularly interested
in the relationship between the aggressors and the victims,
and the way that violence is nurtured. We tend to think
the violence is nurtured by the aggressor, but is this
the case? Could the victim also provide the seed for violence?
I am also interested in the relationship between human
beings and war. Why do we make war even though we claim
we hate it?
MP:
How did you research the period?
JW:
We did a lot of research by looking at documentaries from
the time. And, because of the similarity between Japanese
and Chinese culture, it's not hard for me to understand
the Japanese aspects.
MP:
How closely does the film follow the novella?
JW:
I took five per cent of the novella and developed the
story from that. The village setting and the peasants
being given a sack of Japanese prisoner of war are the
elements I took from the original material. I have worked
with four different scriptwriters on this project.
MP:
How did you go about casting?
JW:
I chose to work with both professional and non-professional
actors. I have actors as old as 80 and as young as children
in the film. I think half of the job of a director is
to do the casting. Once you have done this job, you have
done half your work. So, I would normally talk with the
prospective actor for 30 minutes and that would tell me
if he was right for me.
MP:
How did you come to work with cinematographer Gu Changwei
again, and why did you choose to shoot in black and white?
JW:
I have worked with Changwei on both my films. I just told
Changwei I would like to work with him on this film. He
accepted without reading the script. While we were preparing
the film, we took out the pictures of our actors in their
costumes and made xerox copies of them and placed them
next to xeroxes of actual historical photos. No one could
distinguish between them. That was why we decided to film
this movie in black and white.
MP:
You've also acted in your own
films. How did you go about directing yourself?
JW:
It is very difficult to direct yourself. I have no way
to judge how my performance is going. So, I would ask
my crew to let me know. But they would fight to compete
for the chance to "direct" me. So, I secretly asked someone
in the crew to give me a sign if she thought my performance
was OK. If I didn't see her sign, I would do the scene
again.
MP:
How would you describe the directing process?
JW:
I would say I first see the film in my head. The process
of film-making is to then display what I see on screen.
I spent a long time on pre-production this time. I would
take professional and non-professional actors and mix
them together to rehearse. I also ask them to live among
the people they play some stayed in the army while
others lived with the peasants. I also enjoyed the editing
process, as it was like discovering something new in the
work.
MP:
What did you learn about directing from your work on In
The Heat Of The Sun?
JW:
I learned to make shorter movies. But, somehow I ended
up making a longer film!
Richard
James Havis