| Justin Lin's Game |
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| October 2007 | |
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By Kathy A. McDonald
After studying and
making student films at both UC San Diego and UCLA, Lin broke into features
with the independently-made hit Better
Luck Tomorrow, a story of disaffected Chinese American teens living in a
monochromatic suburb – not unlike “What I’ve learned
in the last five years is having choices is a real luxury,” Lin explains. “If
you get into the position and have choices, you get to have the chance to have
perspective to be a filmmaker,” says Lin, now based in Los Angeles. Although a
rising star in the film business with his own production company, Trailing
Johnson Productions, Lin is self-effacing and unpretentious, with a great sense
of humor—more college bud than pretentious artiste.
While the premise is
based on reality, Finishing the Game
is Lin’s creative imagining of the process to find Lee’s double. It weaves
together several serious themes while wryly observing many Hollywood truisms—the
differing levels of denial—and stereotypical casting of Asian actors–notice who
always portrays the delivery boy. “I have a sense of what it means to be an
Asian American actor from a director’s point of view,” Lin says. “I’ve been in
audition rooms, and I know it’s not an issue of talent; it’s very clear that
it’s an issue of opportunity,” finds the writer-director.
Growing up in suburban Buena Park, Hollywood blockbusters were the norm at the local multiplex. Lin never considered filmmaking as a career possibility until he saw Spike Lee’s Do the Right Thing. “The final scene when the trash can went through the window got me so angry at the movie. It stayed with me for two weeks. It opened my eyes to how films could be made differently.” He also credits Francis Ford Coppola’s Tucker: The Man and His Dream, the classic tale of the underdog, as an influence. At UCLA’s film school, Lin was immersed in auteur cinema and developed an admiration for directors such as Stanley Kubrick and Robert Altman. His cinematic guilty pleasure: comedies, among them Tommy Boy, which he describes as “pretty brilliant,” without a hint of irony, as a true film fan. -------------------------------------------------------------- FINISHING THE GAME had its world premiere at this year’s Sundance Film Festival and went on to open the San Francisco Asian Film Festival, the Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival and the Chicago Asian Showcase. The movie opened in theaters on October 5th in New York and opens in various other cities nationwide throughout October and November. *Photos of Finishing the Game by Hosanna Wong/Trailing Johnson Comments (0)
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Behind all the
glamour and hype of
Finishing the Game
Lin contends that
the idea for Finishing the Game has
been rattling around in his brain since he was a kid and a fan of TV’s “Kung Fu
Theater.” Watching his first Bruce Lee film, Enter the Dragon, was an awakening, he says. “It was the first time
I saw an Asian face on screen who was someone who was empowered and sexy and
complex. I thought, ‘That’s so cool!’ But then you go on the schoolyard and
people are calling you ‘Bruce Lee.’ It’s a pull-and–tug relationship with Bruce
Lee that I think all Asian Americans have,” Lin theorizes. 
