Ang Lee with James Schamus: East Meets Western
Film Retrospective and Regis Dialogue
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  November 11 - December 13, 2005
  Cinema
  $8 ($6 Walker members).
“Let’s jump from genre to genre and be filmmakers and see what we can make of these gifts; whether from Hong Kong or Hollywood, these genres are now so often ossified relics. [We need to] go back in there and shake ’em up.”
--James Schamus, on Ang Lee in indieWIRE

In the early 1990s, Taiwan-born aspiring director Ang Lee connected with James Schamus, founder of upstart company Good Machine in New York, and a long creative collaboration was sparked. Lee directed, Schamus produced, and both wrote. Their first three films—Pushing Hands, The Wedding Banquet, and Eat Drink Man Woman—all featured Sihung Lung as a Taiwanese patriarch confronting a changing world, and formed what Lee has jokingly referred to as the “Father Knows Best” trilogy. They became international hits that revealed universal moments of intergenerational misunderstanding mixed with equal measures pathos and comedy.

In a move that rocked Hollywood, Lee’s next picture was the 18th-century English period piece Sense and Sensibility. The rapturous yet elegant Jane Austen adaptation gained the filmmaker wide recognition for his radical shift in style and perspective. Lee and Schamus continued to defy expectations. Their next foray, The Ice Storm, was situated in the decidedly different setting of Watergate-era suburban America. . . .
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