Another older film this time as I catch up with my DVD collection, this time Ang Lee’s The Wedding Banquet.
* THE WEDDING BANQUET *
Starring: Winston Chao, May Chin, Mitchell Liechtenstein
Director: Ang Lee – 1993 – USA
An early Ang Lee film, he made this one year after his debut film, Pushing Hands, but had actually written it some six years before. Based on the true story of one of his friends in the first half of the film, Lee and co-writer/producer James Schamus take the story through a few smiles onto the screen.
Wai-tung (Winston Chao) is a gay Taiwanese landlord in New York with his boyfriend Simon (Mitchell Liechtenstein). Having not admitted his sexual orientation to his parents, he is pressured by them (and tradition) to get married and to have son to carry the Gao name. Meanwhile, Wei-wei (May Chin) is on the edge of poverty. An Chinese artist living in one of Wai-tung’s derelict buildings, she is looking for a green card to avoid deportation. Noticing both situations, Simon suggests they marry out of convenience, but things go wrong when Wai-tung’s parents come over to New York and a wedding banquet is held.
Although such a story today would have been regarded as a ordinary for a film plot, Lee’s vision at the time it was made was fairly radical for certain sections of society at the time, particularly in conservative Taiwan. Lee pushed the boundaries, even including the first gay kiss scene to appear on Taiwan’s screens.
Despite the ground-breaking story and the fact that I am watching it almost 12 years after it was made, I didn’t feel that there was a sense of believability in the first half of the film. Characters were very 2D and lacked depth. There was a lot of missing chemistry on-screen, and for most of the first half, I did admit I was a little bored. The second half after the banquet takes place, though, was much better. As the characters are exposed and plots unfold, the story becomes more interesting and was much easier to watch.
However, one other gripe is the fact that the humour doesn’t quite make its mark in the movie. There are plenty of opportunities to add the little smiles on peoples’ faces, but the attempts to do so were fairly weak. The only time I let out a chuckle was in the City Hall wedding ceremony. Simply put, it doesn’t match Ang’s third film, Eat Drink Man Woman, in this respect.
Overall though, this is a watchable film, and you can easily see that Lee has developed his techniques quite a long way since his early films. The Wedding Banquet certainly demonstrates why people had faith in him and recognised his talent in the early days. One for a look back.
Links:
IMDb entry
Buy it at YesAsia
