Zhang Yimou Interviewed – ‘Curse of the Golden Flower’
12/20/2006
Posted by Frosty

How open
are you to those ideas coming from people on your crew or in your cast? Sometimes we hear directors have a very clear
vision and they want it their way and sometimes we hear directors are very
democratic and ask for ideas. Where does
your process fit?
Zhang Yimou: I think throughout my cinematic career I've always been a rather democratic
director and I'm very open to actors giving me feedback about their roles their
lines and even more so about other characters.
If they tell me some line that another character has in the script isn't
quite right, I'm always very open to that.
I enjoy this very collaborative form of filmmaking. Having wants and the dialogs, not just with
the actors but with my crew, the cinematographer, with production designers,
the art designer. I think it's through
these different prospectives that we really can make progress and really create
something very beautiful. Of course, I don't just accept all of these
wholeheartedly. I make my own decisions,
whether it works for the film, sometimes I'll have the same conversation with 3
other people and everybody seems to be on the same page we'll go with it, but
if its one lone voice and everyone else seems to think the film should go in a
different direction, I take that into consideration as well. I think I'm pretty open to this collaborative
type of filmmaking.
There's a
quote here about your desire to make a movie about your experiences during the
Cultural Revolution. I'm curious as to
what are some of those experiences and can you talk a little bit about the
immediate years after Mao when you guys were beginning the 5th generation. Was
there fear? Any trepidation about the
subjects you might cover and how difficult was it test some of those movies?
Zhang Yimou: The Cultural Revolution was an extremely important era for me. That
basically was my childhood from the years of 16 to 26. For me those 10 years had an incredible effect
on my life. The first 3 years I spent in the countryside with the peasants, the
latter 7 years I spent working in a factory.
That was a time where I experienced so many things. I met so many people,
and so many stories. Not just my story, but stories that came from other
people. I'd love to tell those stories
one day. That's something I'm waiting for.
Unfortunately the climate in China
right now is such that it's still not completely open to telling these stories,
especially about the Cultural Revolution. There's still a taboo about that. I really
hope in the future things will thaw even further and I'll be able to tell a lot
of these stories. But for now I'm just waiting for the right time. As for after
the Cultural Revolution, when I first went into the Beijing Film
Academy. That was an
incredible era. That was during Dung Chou Ping's open door policy. Everything
seemed possible and everything was just a vibrant time with all kinds of foreign
literature, movies, just flooding into the country. All kinds of native Chinese things that had
been banned. All of a sudden they were
back again. It was a very exciting intellectual
time for us. I remember how excited I
was about seeing so many foreign films that we had never seen before. I
remember hearing about a certain foreign film that had just come in and they
were going to be screening it. We were just
shaking with excitement about the prospect of going in. I remember taking notes
when we were watching it and just sucking in everything. I felt like a sponge
just talking in everything around me. That was a grand time for us. It was not
just a time to learn about cinema but to learn about life.
Many of
your films, in fact I think all of them include the relationship between men
and women as the central element. Did
you see that as a political relationship?
Is it metaphor for politics? Is
it a way for you to make statements about society in general by focusing on an
individual relationship?
Zhang Yimou: I'm not sure how political those relationships are really. A lot of them are really tragic tales of
women who are oppressed and struggling under the shadow of futile society. I
think most recent films is another example of that. It's really that struggle that resistance
against the darker aspects of Chinese futile society that I m trying to
express.
Thank
you. 
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