Calgary Herald

Embracing change on the showbiz trek

Cho finds his way to artistic home

- KATHERINE MONK

The mechanics of making a movie are generally the same just about anywhere you go, but American actor John Cho discovered a significan­t difference between shooting a big studio picture in L.A. and a small independen­t film on the outskirts of Vancouver.

“If I may generalize about your culture, there’s a sense that we’re all in it together,” says Cho from the Mission, B.C., set of That Burning Feeling, a new comedy directed by Vancouver producer Jason James (Cole, Robson Arms).

“I’m not joking. I actually heard someone say ‘If we all pitch in, we can get it done faster.’ I had never heard anyone say that on a set before ... In most cases, you’d hear ‘Hey, get that done or we won’t get the shot. I’ll have you fired.’”

Granted, the stakes are a little bit different. Cho is a Hollywood veteran who went from smaller parts in such classics as American Beauty and Wag the Dog to brand-name fame in the wake of the Harold and Kumar franchise.

Now a member of the new crew for the Starship Enterprise in the role of Sulu, Cho can say he’s been in a spectacle, but the true rewards of acting are often more palpable on smaller sets, such as this one in the cold, dark dampness of the west coast. That Burning Feeling is about a man (Paulo Costanzo) diagnosed with a sexually transmitte­d disease and then forced into disclosing the unpleasant news to his previous partners. Cho is part of a comic chorus that includes Ingrid Haas.

Developed in partnershi­p with Telefilm’s comedy lab, it’s not what you’d call a “big movie.” But producer-turneddire­ctor James says no genre is better suited to low-budget moviemakin­g than comedy.

“I wanted to make a romantic comedy about the least romantic thing possible … a sexually transmitte­d disease.”

Cho says he agreed to the part because he had a relationsh­ip with the writer, Nicolas Citton, and he thought it would be a fun thing to do with a friend. “I was also attracted to the narcissism of the character. That resonated on a certain level.”

He’s seen his own ego, he says. “Fortunatel­y, I wasn’t successful enough to embarrass myself in any meaningful way. Trust me, though. I did on a local level.”

He knows others haven’t been so lucky.

“It’s really weird as an actor because you can be in your 20s and living life and being stupid, and no one taps you on the shoulder and says, ‘hey, hopefully you are in this for 40-50 years — and you’re going to be running into the same people. Don’t embarrass yourself in front of people you’re going to see decade after decade because you can’t go to Houston to be an actor.’”

Over his two decades in the business, Cho says he’s turned his whole metier into a means of human study — not just as an actor studying character, but also as an observer to the whole fame phenomenon and what it takes to succeed.

“I am interested in people who are on top and how they stay on top. In a vague way, it’s a bit like athletes and how they stay on top of their game. You know, I always root for the older athlete. I root for the second album. I root for solo careers after the rock star breaks the band apart,” he says.

The challenge is the changing self, he says. “The reasons why I enjoyed acting when I began are not the same now. And at first, that sent me into a bit of a crisis because acting didn’t make me as happy as it did when I started. So I had to find another way for it to make me happy. You have to accommodat­e your changing personalit­y or values, and you have to shape the work in a way that you can feel satisfied.” Right now, Cho says he’s found a good fulcrum.

“Thankfully, I’m not sweating too much about how to climb the ladder, and I’m not sweating too much about the money. I’m trying to think of making work that I am proud of, and I think everything falls into place after that.”

Cho says relaxing has allowed him to find more bliss per moment, but working on the Star Trek movies is an ambient pleasure sensation.

“I would describe (being on that set) as a sense of wonderment. You go on the Starship Enterprise and it’s like being in an electronic cathedral. It’s like being in a storybook and you have to make that real,” he says.

“This movie is a little different. We are in the elements, and office buildings, and courthouse steps. But my job is still the same: To make it real.”

That Burning Feeling is slated for a late 2013 release.

 ?? ?? Actor Jason Cho, left, with director Jason James while making That Burning Feeling.
Actor Jason Cho, left, with director Jason James while making That Burning Feeling.
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