The Peterborough Examiner

Big-screen adaptation breaks ground

Kw an hopes film goers will embrace Crazy Rich Asians

- ANGELA CHEN

HONG KONG — Kevin Kwan believes America will embrace the Crazy Rich Asians movie, which is based on his bestsellin­g novel of the same name. The Singapore an novelist was in Hong Kong recently to promote Rich People Problems, the last book in his Crazy Rich trilogy. His first book, Crazy Rich Asians, released in 2013, is the story of an Asian-American girl, Rachel, accompanyi­ng her boyfriend, Nick, to Singapore for a wedding, only to learn about Nick’s family wealth and power after stepping off the plane. The book provides a glimpse into the decadent and opulent lives of Asia’s ultra-rich. Its popularity gave birth to a sequel, China Rich Girlfriend­s.

It didn’ t take long for Hollywood to notice the success of Kwan’s books and buy the rights to make

Crazy Rich Asians into a film. Kw an served as an executive producer on the Crazy Rich Asians movie, and said it was a long time coming for Hollywood to make a romantic comedy with an all-Asian cast.

“I think it’s huge,” he said. “It’s really the first time. ... I’m sorry it hasn’t happened earlier.”

“People are really eager to see if Hollywood keeps its promise and rolls out this movie the way we want it to,” he said.

Hollywood came under heavy criticism for so-called “white washing” last year when Tilda Swinton was cast as a character that was originally Tibetan in Doctor

Strange and Scarlett Johansson played the cyborg protagonis­t in the Japanese anime remake

Ghost in the Shell. More recently, British actor EdSk re in was cast as a Japanese-American character in are boot of Hell boy. After ab ac klash, Skre in announced that he had withdrawn from the film. Kwan said that for Crazy Rich

Asians, he and the film’s director, Jon M. Chu, insisted on an allAsian cast.

“It’s really been a dream come true, you know,” Kwan said. “Because even from the very start, when Hollywood was first interested in adopting it, I was thinking, Michelle Yeoh would be perfect, Constance Wu would be perfect. All these people, the fact that the dream sort of all came together.”

Wu, the breakout star from the sitcom Fresh off the Boat, plays the unassuming Rachel, while Yeoh plays her boyfriend’s disapprovi­ng mother. The dashing, rich Nick is played by newcomer Henry Golding. Others in the cast include Hangover star Ken Jeong and Harry Shum Jr. from Glee.

With racial tensions on the rise in the United States, Kwan said he remains confident that Americans will embrace Crazy Rich Asians.

“They have a history of multicultu­ralism in the industry, but over the last few years, it’s really, I think, the corporatiz­ation of Hollywood, the fact that it’s owned by these big huge corporatio­ns, where they just want to see profit, profit, profit,” Kwan said. “They take a lot less risks and a lot less artistic risks. But I think that’s changing, it really is, because the audience is demanding it, not just the Asian audience, the American, white audience is demanding it.”

 ?? VINCENTYU/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Singaporea­n novelist Kevin Kwan talks during an interview in Hong Kong.
VINCENTYU/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Singaporea­n novelist Kevin Kwan talks during an interview in Hong Kong.

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