John Woo

  • John Woo
  • John Woo
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John Woo Biography

John Woo Yu-Sen (Chinese: 吳宇森; pinyin: Wú Yǔsēn) (born May 1, 1946) is an internationally and critically acclaimed Chinese film director and producer. Woo is widely known for his stylised movies which are renowned for their balletic action sequences, Mexican stand-offs, and use of slow-motion. He directed the notable Hong Kong action films, A Better Tomorrow, Hard Boiled, and The Killer. His English-language movies include Hard Target, Broken Arrow, Face/Off, and Mission: Impossible 2. As a young boy, Woo wanted to be a Christian minister; he later found a passion for movies influenced by European film, the French New Wave and Jean-Pierre Melville. Woo has said he was shy and had difficulty speaking, but found making movies a way to explore his feelings and thinking and would "use movie as a language". Woo cites his three favourite films as Lawrence of Arabia, Seven Samurai and Melville`s Le Samouraï. Woo was described by Dave Kehr in The Observer in 2002 as "arguably the most influential director making movies today".

At age five Woo`s parents were faced with persecution in China and his Christian family fled to Hong Kong. During this time, the Woo family led a hard life in the slums at Shek Kip Mei, since his father had tuberculosis and could not work. Woo went to Concordia Lutheran School and received Christian education. In 1953 the family was rendered homeless, when their house was burned to the ground as part of the famous HK Shek Kip Mei fire. Thanks to donations from charities, his family was able to move into another house. Unfortunately, by this time, a wave of crime and violence was beginning to infest Hong Kong`s housing projects.

In order to escape his dismal surroundings, Woo would retreat to the local movie theater. Woo found his respite through musicals like The Wizard of Oz. During his youth, he enjoyed watching Western movies, especially the final scene in Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid where the two comrades run out gun blazing (where he got the inspiration of holding two guns). Woo is also a fan of Hollywood musicals.

Woo married Annie Woo Ngau Chun-lung in 1976 and has had three children. He plans to continue living in the United States.

Biography Credit: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_woo
 

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Snapshot

    Name John Woo
    (Yusen Wu)
    Age 63
    Height 5' 4½"  (164 cm)
    Build Average
    Eye Color Brown - Dark
    Hair Color Black
    Date of Birth May 11946
    Birthplace Guangzho, China
    Star Sign Taurus
    Nationality Chinese
    Ethnicity Asian
    High School Matteo Ricci College, Kowloon, Hong Kong
    Occupation Director
    Celebrity Index Jo
    Claim to Fame Director of Hong Kong action films

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Trivia

  • I like doves. They look so beautiful, like a woman. For me they represent peace and love and purity. And sometimes they`re seen as the messengers of God, so they`re important to me because I`m a Christian.
    (imdb.com)
  • I`m not a master; I`m just a hard-working filmmaker. I would like everyone to see me as a friend rather than a master.
    (imdb.com)
  • [on Tom Cruise] When he talks, he has so much energy it`s almost like he`s dancing. So I used that to choreograph his action scenes.
    (imdb.com)
    Trivia
  • Two of his films are listed in the Hong Kong Film Awards' List of The Best 100 Chinese Motion Pictures on March 2005. They are _Die xue shuang xiong (1989)_ and Ying hung boon sik (1986) (ranking 42 and 2, respectively).
    (imdb.com)
  • First job was working for Shaw Brothers studios as an assistant director to Chang Chee. Martin Scorsese and Sam Peckinpah are his favorite directors.
    (imdb.com)
  • When trying to convince Universal to get him to direct Hard Target (1993), Jean-Claude Van Damme championed Woo as "the Martin Scorsese of Asia".
    (imdb.com)
  • French director Jean-Pierre Melville has had the most influence on Woo; he based his 1989 film The Killer on Le Samourai.
    (imdb.com)
  • He is the first Asian director ever to make a mainstream Hollywood film (Hard Target (1993)).
    (imdb.com)
  • Woo's many American admirers include the likes of Martin Scorsese, Sam Raimi (who compared his mastery of action to Alfred Hitchcock's mastery of suspense) and Quentin Tarantino (who, replying to a studio executive saying "I suppose Woo can direct action scenes" said "Sure, and Michelangelo can paint ceilings!").
    (imdb.com)
  • His film _Die xue shuang xiong (1989)_ (aka The Killer) (alongside Lung fu fong wan (1987) (City on Fire) by Ringo Lam) was one of the inspirations for Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs (1992). Although the plot came from "City on Fire", a lot of the style of "Reservoir Dogs" (i.e., the suits, the Mexican standoffs, the double guns) came from "The Killer" as well as Woo's work in general.
    (imdb.com)
  • Trademark: Birds: Many Woo films include slow-motion sequences of birds (usually doves)
    (imdb.com)
  • He is the fifth Chinese director after Hark Tsui to join the board of judges for Cannes Film Festival (the 58th, in 2005).
    (imdb.com)
  • He uses doves as a symbolic device. They represent the character's soul as being saved.
    (imdb.com)
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