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Ang Lee’s ‘Lust’ gallops away with seven Golden Horses
Doug Young
TAIPEI — Ang Lee’s steamy “Lust, Caution” trotted off as the big winner
on Saturday at the 2007 Golden Horse awards, the most coveted
Chinese-language film prizes, picking up seven honours including best
director and best film.
Despite its low profile in the West, the Golden Horse is a spectacular
occasion for the Chinese-speaking world, with top talent from Taiwan,
Hong Kong and China turning out each year for the red-carpet event in
Taipei.
“Lust, Caution,” the favourite going into the star-studded event, also
helped Lee win the award for outstanding Taiwanese filmmaker of the
year. “This is for the lack of respect that Taiwan has gotten in the
past,” Lee said backstage, after getting the outstanding Taiwanese
filmmaker award. “My point of view, my style are all from Taiwan. So I’m
very much representing Taiwan.”
“Lust” also won best leading actor honours for Hong Kong star Tony Leung
Chiu Wei.
“Lust,” Lee’s most prominent Chinese-language film since “Crouching
Tiger, Hidden Dragon,” won the Golden Lion at the Venice film festival,
and had the advantage of much stronger publicity than its rivals.
The awards feature mostly films from Taiwan and Hong Kong. In addition
to Lee and Leung, luminaries on this year’s list included Hong Kong film
star Aaron Kwok and China-born Joan Chen, who burst on to the movie
scene in Bernardo Bertolucci’s “The Last Emperor” in 1987. Chen returned
to the limelight at this year’s Golden Horses, picking up the best
leading actress award for her role in “The Home Song Stories.”
Pop star Jay Chou’s directorial debut “Secret” also did well, winning
awards for best original song and visual effects, as well as the
outstanding Taiwanese film of the year.
This year’s show was also marked by controversy when two mainland
Chinese films “Tuya’s Marriage” and “Blind Mountain,” were submitted by
film makers, only to be forced to withdraw later.
China, which has claimed sovereignty over self-ruled Taiwan since the
end of the Chinese civil war in 1949, doesn’t allow its movies to
compete, though co-productions between Chinese and foreign houses are
allowed.
Cultural exchanges have increased across the Taiwan Strait in the last
decade, but political relations have been icy during the seven-year
tenure of President Chen Shui-bian, whose Democratic Progressive Party
favours independence.
“Lust, Caution,” about a Chinese woman tasked with killing a Japanese
collaborator in Shanghai during World War Two, has also been the subject
of controversy, with some decrying it for being too long and others
critical of its graphic sex scenes.
The film drew additional attention when China said it would cut some
scenes before screening it there.
Despite its success to date, Taiwan was prohibited from submitting
“Lust” for the Academy Awards foreign film category after the Academy
ruled its cast was too international. |