The Sunday Guardian

What 3D films should be about, according to director Ang Lee

- Ang Lee.

When Ang Lee’s new movie Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk premiered at the New York Film Festival last autumn, the reactions were not what the two-time Oscar-winning director might’ve hoped for. Based on the 2012 novel by Ben Fountain, the critical objections were less against the story of a US soldier returning from Iraq to homecoming hysteria than the film’s groundbrea­king technical innovation­s.

Using 3D and 4K resolution, Lee and his cinematogr­apher John Toll shot the film at 120 frames per second – almost four times the usual 24fps speed. The result of this higher frame rate lends the film an almost hyper-real look, magnifying the visual clarity to an almost unsettling degree. Much like when Peter Jackson shot The Hobbit at 48fps, some complained about the “soap opera effect”, the undesirabl­e ‘smooth’ quality that some modern HD television­s can produce.

“Realness of emotion overpowere­d by realness of image,” complained one viewer on Twitter after that first screening, echoing the sentiments of many. When we meet in a London hotel, the 62 yearold grey-haired Lee looks rather dejected; “The movie was hardly seen in the States,” he sighs. “The studio didn’t do much to promote [it].” The film flopped there, taking less than $2 million. It didn’t help that only two theatres – in New York and Los Angeles – were equipped to show the film in its intended 120fps format.

While the film can be screened without this new format, Lee has a right to feel aggrieved. A technical pioneer – Life of Pi truly pushed the boundaries of 3D – his experiment­s mean that, as trade paper Variety put it, Billy Lynn’s “has the potential to be a revolution­ary film”, opening the door for a “new way for [movies] to be experience­d”. Too modest to say so, the softly-spoken Lee simply shrugs. “I try to make a difference, but I can only go so far.”

Part of the problem, he says, is getting audiences to adjust; he believes using this new technology shouldn’t just be for blockbuste­rs. “My personal feeling is contrary to what people believe a 3D movie ought to be – a technicall­y advanced movie – which is spectacle or action. In this media, what you get most – an advantage – is an intimacy, the way you engage, the sympathy, with the character. That’s what I found. I know it’s a tough sell, against convention.”

He compares it to the days when CinemaScop­e was introduced in Hollywood in the 1950s, the widescreen innovation used to battle declining audiences. “It’s a different way of making movies,” he says. “Right now, it takes some reason to see it.” He cites the film’s immersive flashbacks to Billy’s time in Iraq. But in the future, it won’t be confined to action sequences. “When you get used to it, you’ll see [it] more and more,” he promises.

The film stars British newcomer Joe Alwyn as the 19 yearold Billy, who takes centre stage at a celebrator­y parade at a Thanksgivi­ng halftime show at a Dallas Cowboys’ football match. Lee smartly juxtaposes this surreal hoopla with the horrors faced back in Iraq. “I don’t really see it as a war movie or a homecoming movie,” he says. “It’s more a social study and character study, a movie about growth and faith, rather than a war movie or coming-of-age movie.”

As much as Lee denies it’s a “homecoming” movie, putting it alongside films like Stop-Loss and In The Valley of Elah, it highlights the disparity between civilians’ perception­s and soldiers’ experience­s of the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanista­n. “I understand that soldiers are bothered when people thank them for their service – because it means they [civilians] don’t have to do it,” Lee says. “If you really care, give them money – jobs and money. Don’t thank them, give them actual help.”

Billy Lynn’s certainly falls into the category of Lee’s American canon – movies like Seventies suburbia tale The Ice Storm, gay cowboy drama Brokeback Mountain (which won him his first Oscar for Best Director) and Civil War-set Ride With The Devil. The New York-based Lee – who has two children with Jane, his wife of 33 years – has lived in the US since 1980, arriving from his native Taiwan to study drama at the University of Illinois and film production at NYU’s Film School.

Yet Lee has frequently returned to Asia, making films like the breathtaki­ng martial arts drama Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and Life of Pi (which garnered him a second Best Director Oscar). So it’s no surprise he’s feeling tense when we meet, the day before Donald Trump’s presidenti­al inaugurati­on. Already, Trump has ruffled feathers by speaking to the President of Taiwan – still regarded by mainland China as a breakaway outlaw province.

The first US leader to do so since President Jimmy Carter adopted the One China policy in 1979, recognisin­g Beijing as China’s sole government, Lee is not convinced by Trump’s new-found interest in his homeland. “I don’t think he cares about Taiwan,” he says. “He gives China a hard-time… what can they do except kick our ass? I don’t think Trump cares about Taiwan. It’s one of the bargain chips, I suppose. I don’t think he cares for us. So we’re under the pressure of two big opposing powers – so, yeah, I do worry for my countrymen.”

With his life embedded in New York, he can’t uproot and head back to Asia, though admits he’s been “brooding” on making another film back in his native continent. He’s also desperate to shoot Thrilla In Manila, a depiction of the legendary 1975 boxing match in the Philippine­s between Muhammad Ali and Joe Frazier – again using the 120fps format. With expensive visual effects and doubts over the higher frame rate, it’s been slow-going to get it financed. THE INDEPENDEN­T

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