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The Wedding Banquet

 
Movies:

The Wedding Banquet

  • Director: Ang Lee
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Comedy Drama
  • Movie Type: Romantic Comedy, Gay & Lesbian Films
  • Themes: Marriages of Convenience, Culture Clash, Wedding Bells
  • Main Cast: Winston Chao, May Chin, Mitchell Lichtenstein, Sihung Lung, Ah-Leh Gua
  • Release Year: 1993
  • Country: TW
  • Run Time: 111 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

A gay New Yorker stages a marriage of convenience with a young woman to satisfy his traditional Taiwanese family, but the wedding becomes a major inconvenience when his parents fly in for the ceremony. Director Ang Lee came to international prominence with this warm-hearted comedy, which centers on the farcical confusion that emerges from this deception. Gao Wai Tung (Winston Chao) has never shared the truth about his sexuality with his family, and hopes to disguise his long-term relationship with his lover Simon by marrying Wei-Wei, a young artist who's only it for the green card. But Wai Tung's parents refuse to let him off the hook easily, showing up to plan a massive wedding banquet. Indeed, much of the film's comedy springs from the contrast between the sheer lavishness of the parents' plans and the sham nature of the wedding. Naturally, the titular party spins out of control, leading to a series of events that threatens all of Wai Tung's relationships. ~ Judd Blaise, All Movie Guide

Review

Ang Lee's breakthrough film, The Wedding Banquet puts a different, multicultural spin on family and romantic comedy with winning results. Taking a low-key approach to a set-up that is potentially the stuff of slapstick farce, Lee still finds the humor as the intended marriage of convenience between a gay Taiwanese immigrant in New York and an infatuated female tenant in need of a green card is thrown into chaos by the arrival of the groom's proud parents. The elaborately staged eponymous party becomes a comically tense drunken mess, but the characters' underlying expectations and dashed hopes ultimately render The Wedding Banquet a subtle and sensitive study of Chinese cultural pressures (even on far-flown expatriates) and the ingrained homophobia that makes the burden of tradition even heavier. A film festival success and critical darling, The Wedding Banquet became an art house hit, and the New York-based Lee's first Best Foreign Film Oscar nomination. ~ Lucia Bozzola, All Movie Guide

Cast

  • Winston Chao - Wai Tung
  • May Chin - Wei-Wei
  • Mitchell Lichtenstein - Simon
  • Sihung Lung - Mr. Gao
  • Ah-Leh Gua - Mrs. Gao
Jeffrey Howard - Street Musician; Patricia Sullivan - Mariane; Ang Lee - Wedding Guest; John Nathan - Joe; Michael Gaston - Justice of the Peace; Neal Huff - Steve; Mason Lee - Child Jumping on Bed (uncredited)

Credit

Michael Clancy - Costume Designer, Ang Lee - Director, Tim Squyres - Editor, Jiang Feng-Chyi - Executive Producer, Mader - Composer (Music Score), Steve Rosenzweig - Production Designer, Jong Lin - Cinematographer, James Schamus - Producer, Dolly Hall - Producer, Ang Lee - Producer, Ted Hope - Producer, James Schamus - Screenwriter, Ang Lee - Screenwriter

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 喜宴 (The Wedding Banquet) 
Directed by Ang Lee
Produced by Ang Lee
Ted Hope
James Schamus
Written by Ang Lee
Neil Peng
James Schamus
Starring Dion Birney
Jeanne Kuo Chang
Winston Chao
May Chin
Ah Lei Gua
Sihung Lung
Mitchell Lichtenstein
Cinematography Lin Jong
Editing by Tim Squyres
Distributed by Samuel Goldwyn Company
Release date(s) 4 August 1993 (U.S.)
19 November 1993 (Canada)
9 December 1993 (Australia)
Running time 106 min.
Language Mandarin Chinese, English

The Wedding Banquet (Chinese: 喜宴pinyin: Xǐyàn; Wade-Giles: Hsi yen), is a 1993 film about a gay Taiwanese immigrant man who marries a mainland Chinese woman to placate his parents and get her a green card. His plan backfires when his parents arrive in the United States to plan his wedding banquet.

The film was directed by Ang Lee and stars Winston Chao, Mitchell Lichtenstein, May Chin, Ah Lei Gua, Dion Birney, Sihung Lung, and others. The Wedding Banquet is the first of three movies that Ang Lee would make about gay characters; the second is Brokeback Mountain and the third being Taking Woodstock. Lee himself makes a cameo appearance in the film as a wedding guest attending the banquet. The film is a co-production between Taiwan and the United States.

Contents

Plot summary

Wai-Tung Gao (Winston Chao) and Simon (Mitchell Lichtenstein) are a happy gay couple living in Manhattan. Wai-Tung is in his late 20s, so his Taiwanese parents (Sihung Lung and Ah-Leh Gua) are eager to see him get married and have a child. The early part of the movie is madcap comedy. When Wai-Tung's parents hire a dating service he and Simon stall for time by inventing impossible demands. Chinese opera singers are always men, so they demand an opera singer and add that she must be very tall, must have two Ph.D.'s and should speak five languages. The service actually locates a 1.75 m (5'9") Chinese woman who sings Western opera, speaks five languages and has a single Ph.D. She is very gracious when Wai-Tung explains his dilemma. At Simon's insistence, Wai-Tung decides to get married to one of his tenants, Wei-Wei (May Chin), a penniless artist from mainland China in need of a green card. Besides helping out Wei-Wei, Simon and Wai-Tung hope that this will placate Wai-Tung's parents.

Mr. and Mrs. Gao decide to fly in from Taiwan, bringing US$30,000 to hold a magnificent wedding ceremony for their son. Wai-Tung dares not tell his parents the true situation, because his father has just recovered from a stroke; they go through with the wedding. However, the heartbreak his mother experiences at the courthouse wedding prepares the story for a shift to drama. The only way to atone for the disgraceful wedding is a magnificent wedding banquet. After the banquet, Wei-Wei seduces the drunken Wai-tung, and becomes pregnant. Simon is extremely upset when he finds out, and his relationship with Wai-Tung begins to deteriorate.

In a moment of anger, after a fight with both Simon and Wei-Wei, Wai-Tung tells his mother the truth. She is shocked and insists that he not tell his father. The perceptive Mr. Gao sees more than he is letting on; he secretly tells Simon that he knows about their relationship, and, appreciating the considerable sacrifices he made for his biological son, takes Simon as his son as well. Simon accepts the Hongbao from Wai-Tung's father, a symbolic admission of their relationship, but Mr. Gao makes him promise not to tell anyone; without everyone trying to lie to him, he points out, he'd never have gotten a grandchild.

After making an appointment to have an abortion, Wei-Wei decides to keep the baby, and asks Simon to stay together with Wai-Tung and be the baby's other father. In the final parting scene, as Wai-Tung's parents prepare to fly home, Mrs. Gao has clearly forged an emotional bond to daughter-in-law Wei-Wei. Mr. Gao accepts Simon and warmly shakes his hand. In the end, both derive some happiness from the situation, and they walk off to board the aircraft, leaving the unconventional family to sort itself out.

Awards

The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film and Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film. It won the Golden Space Needle of the Seattle International Film Festival and the Golden Bear of the Berlin Film Festival in 1993.

Spinoffs

In December 1993, a novelization of the film, titled Wedding Banquet (ウェディングバンケット Wedingu Banketto?) and published in Japan, was written by Yūji Konno (今野 雄二 Konno Yūji?). (ISBN 4-8387-0508-5)[1]

See also

References

External links


Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Grand Canyon
Golden Bear winner
1993 tied with
Woman Sesame Oil Maker
Succeeded by
In the Name of the Father

 
 

 

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