-
Website
http://www.filmschoolrejects.com/ -
Original page
http://www.filmschoolrejects.com/news/ang-lee-threatens-fowl-play-in-taking-woodstock.php -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
mychaleg
85 comments · 2 points
-
Peter Donohue
123 comments · 83 points
-
littlemovieman
58 comments · 2 points
-
Rohith
48 comments · 1 points
-
Reebee7
114 comments · 58 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
Twilight Saga: New Moon Sets Records, Hauls in $140 million
6 hours ago · 5 comments
-
Caption This: Win Uwe Boll’s Far Cry on DVD!
1 day ago · 21 comments
-
New Moon Topples The Dark Knight’s Opening Day Record
1 day ago · 16 comments
-
Here’s Your Chance: What Did You Think of Twilight: New Moon?
2 days ago · 24 comments
-
Remember Me Trailer: Maybe Robert Pattinson Can Act
3 days ago · 16 comments
-
Twilight Saga: New Moon Sets Records, Hauls in $140 million
The movie is both funny and touching. It also show the horror of war.
i hope you remake that movie in future, im willing to undergo a audition for casting call i hope im the markova coz i want to be famous in hollywood or in the world,
Ang Lee is "Taking Woodstock", but how did this movie come to him?
Ang Lee is "Taking Woodstock", but how did this
movie wind up in his hands?
by Dan Bloom
TAIWAN -- Taiwan-born film director and Oscar winner Ang Lee is
tackling a new movie project, a comedy this
time, about America's famous Woodstock music festival in 1969. Titled
"Taking Woodstock", and adapted by longtime Lee collaborator James
Schamus, the movie stems from a book of the same name by U.S. writer
Elliot Tiber.
Tiber's memoir, co-written with Tom Monte, was published with in 2007
and subtitled "A True Story
of a Riot, a Concert, and a Life".
It's set for a premiere in New York on June 26, 2009,
just in time for the 40th anniversary of the famous Woodstock concert .
What does the title of the book, and the movie mean? Inquiring minds
on both sides of the Pacific want to know, and one industry insider
told what he knows to this reporter.
"Taking Woodstock'" means two
things: Taking stock of your life and, in a sense, control of your
destiny -- and also taking the experience of Woodstock, and what that
cultural event meant, with you for the rest of your life, according to
the industry insider. A marketing maven at the publishing house in New
York came up with the phrase, he added.
How did a book that few people had even heard about wind up in Ang
Lee's hands? Was it fate, karma, serendipity?
"It might sound like something out of a Hollywood drugstore story
where the pretty girl is 'discovered' by a savvy scout, but it really
happened this
way," says one of the few people who knows about the genesis of the
book and the movie. "Eliot Tiber was scheduled to appear on a TV show
in San Francisco in 2007 to promote the book, and while he was waiting
in the green room to go on the show, Ang Lee sat down beside him, by
complete chance. Lee was also scheduled to appear on the same show to
promote his current film at the time, 'Lust, Caution'. Tiber, who had
never
met Lee before but knew his name, struck up a conversation with the
Taiwan-born helmer and then spent the next thirty minutes or so
chatting about his book. Lee had asked what the book was about, so
Tiber told him."
"Later, when Lee went on the show, the host asked him where he usually
gets his ideas for his movies, and Lee said that he really doesn't go
looking for stories, that they seem to come to him. And with that he
turned to Tiber, who was sitting across from him on the TV set, and
gave him a wink," the insider told this reporter.
"Fast forward to nine months later ... Lee finally had read the book,
loved it, and felt there
was a very good movie there, so he headed to upstate New York to visit
the farm where Woodstock took place in 1969. That's the inside story
in a nutshell: fate, karma, destiny," the insider added.
------
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Dan Bloom is a columnist for RUSHPRNEWS, based in
Taiwan. He lives not far from Lee's hometown in southern Taiwan