Skip to main content.

Book Description

The Cinema of Ang Lee: The Other Side of the Screen (Directors’ Cuts).  The first full-length study of its kind, the book investigates recurring themes and motifs across Ang Lee’s astonishingly diverse range of works. From the blockbuster, Hulk, to the period drama, Sense and Sensibility, each film is studied in depth to reveal Lee’s interest in gender, cultural identity, family ritual and social duty.

The volume not only investigates Lee’s greatest successes - Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon (2000), which transformed the status of Chinese martial arts films across the globe, and Brokeback Mountain (2005), which challenged the reception and presentation of homosexuality in mainstream cinema - it also discusses his earlier works, such as Eat Drink Man Woman (1994) and The Wedding Banquet (1993). By looking at the beginnings of Lee’s career, Whitney Crothers Dilley positions the filmmaker’s work within the roots of the Taiwan New Cinema movement, as well as the larger context of world cinema. Accessible, lively and incisive, this new addition to our Directors’ Cuts series not only provides a valuable academic resource but also an enjoyable read for anyone interested in this acclaimed director.

Editorial Reviews

Chris Berry, Goldsmiths College, University of London
“The first major study of a director who deserves much more attention … Essential reading for any scholar of either contemporary Chinese or American film.”

Ian Haydn Smith, editor of The Cinema of China and South East Asia
“An excellent and incisive overview of the career of one of contemporary cinema’s most fascinating and acclaimed figures. As passionate as it is erudite, this is a welcome volume for both film students and those with an interest in the director’s work.”

Print Reviews

Bradley Winterton, Taipei Times, December 2007
‘’This new book’s essential characteristics are clarity, perceptiveness, sympathy and thoroughness. This is no coterie text for cineastes or crabbed work for academics. Instead, it’s eminently clear-headed and lucid, covering all his films in detail, but also containing a perceptive and even profound overview of the inner nature of Lee’s achievement… It’s an understanding of the deep nature of her subject that makes Dilley’s groundbreaking and comprehensive book such a rewarding read, and such a very fine achievement.’

Brian Hu, Asia Pacific Arts, October 2007
‘Dilley’s book provides an essential overview of the debates surrounding Ang Lee and his films… Dilley [displays] analytic strength, particularly in her exploration of the use of language throughout Lee’s films. The clash of languages is an important narrative element of Lee’s immigrant stories, Pushing Hands and The Wedding Banquet. In The Ice Storm, Ride with the Devil, and Brokeback Mountain, language is rightfully seen as one of the films’ key sources of audience pleasure, so her analysis of their words, phrasings, and deliveries is most welcome. In Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon, language is the site of cultural translation, given the film’s unique writing and subtitling process.

Dilley’s book also collects great insights into the production and reception of Lee’s cross-cultural films. The discussion of the Taiwanese reception to the overly-”Western” Eat Drink Man Woman provides a nice antecedent to what would happen years later with Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon. And the section on Sense and Sensibility includes wonderful quotes and anecdotes by the film’s British cast and crew about working with a “foreign” director.’

Amazon Reviews

 

5.0 out of 5 stars
Must Read for Ang Lee fans, September 7, 2007

By Ward Davies (Los Angeles, CA, USA) - See all my reviews

This book is an extraordinarily thorough and well-written account of Ang Lee’s career. Anybody interested in the director’s work would be fascinated to read it. I highly recommend it.

Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you?


 

5.0 out of 5 stars Ang Lee Explained, September 7, 2007

By Jane Bowling (New York, NY USA) - See all my reviews

This is must reading for film buffs.

This book is no less than a terrific synopsis of Ang Lee’s life and filmmaking motivations plus a thorough review of the common themes that surprisingly link Lee’s amazingly diverse films.

Whitney Crothers Dilley’s much-anticipated book provides the first in-depth look at one of the most heralded creative film directors still active today. A true auteur, Ang Lee has taken on the challenge of almost all the classic film genres and done them all marvelously.

From his early Taiwanese-themed social comedies through his Chinese/American and American and even British mainstream films to The Hulk (his only commercial failure) to the colossal last two released films, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and Brokeback Mountain, no film director has ever generated an oeuvre of such range.

With a new Ang Lee film in yet a new genre coming out later this year (this time a film noir set in 1940’s Shanghai), The cinema of Ang Lee … the other side of the screen is the perfect read for all the relevant background on this astonishing director before seeing it.

Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you?

 

5.0 out of 5 stars
Inside Ang Lee’s World, November 5, 2007

By Kevin Healam (Spokane, WA USA) - See all my reviews(REAL NAME)

This scholarly treatise of director Ang Lee by Whitney Crothers Dilley is a thoroughly engaging, in-depth study of this iconic and enigmatic filmmaker. Logically organised and richly researched, The Cinema of Ang Lee shows great insight on the many influences which impacted Mr. Lee’s directorial vision: born in Taiwan, to parents who escaped Mainland China following the 1949 Civil War, his cultural identity further diluted when he came to the U.S. at age 23 in his yearning to break free of parental control to pursue his artistic and cinematic dreams.

Ms. Crothers Dilley astutely shows us that Ang Lee’s directorial range cannot be confined to a single culture or genre, and while films such as Eat Drink Man Woman, Sense and Sensibility, The Ice Storm, and Hulk appear to be thematically disparate, common threads course throughout his filmography. Globalisation / cultural identity, family ritual, intergenerational conflict, dialogue-free visual metaphors, cultural codes of behavior, and above all the inherent diaspora brought to bear stemming from his personal history bring a unique perspective to each of his films.

Serious students of film as well as casual fans of Ang Lee’s body of work will love this book. Take the time to go on a wonderful journey as each film is dissected in order to find, in Ang Lee’s words, “‘The Juice’, the thing that moves people, the thing that is untranslatable by words”.

Comment Comment | Permalink | Was this review helpful to you?

Product Details