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BookDragon Blog

01 Jan / Ang Lee by Ellen Cheshire [in Push > for NAATA]

Ang LeePart of the PocketEssentials series out the U.K., Ang Lee is one of the latest available additions to an eclectic mix of film-related titles. While it reads a bit like a glorified student project, it’s a solid introduction to the very private filmmaker and his films thus far – from his NYU MFA shorts to his breakout Wedding Banquet to his crossover hit Sense and Sensibility to his mega blockbuster Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. It even includes a couple of pages on the Latin American remake of Lee’s Eat Drink Man Woman, 2001’s Tortilla Soup, starring Hector Elizondo and Raquel Welch (!). Go figure.

Review: “Diasporic Proliferation or: We’re Here, There and Everywhere … and Growing,” Push >, NAATA: National Asian American Telecommunications Center (now the Center for Asian American Media), 2002

Readers: Adult

Published: 2001

By Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center in Adult Readers, Biography, Nonfiction, Repost, Taiwanese American Tags > Ang Lee, BookDragon, Center for Asian American Media, Ellen Cheshire, Film studies, NAATA
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