Good, very nice, looking sharpâ¦â In the photography studio, accompanied by the clicking sounds, photographer Michael Cliff pressed the camera shutter while Wang Yang, standing in front of a white backdrop, adjusted his expressions and poses according to his directions. Then Michael turned to a staff member nearby and said, âMove that camera next to Yang and letâs take a few more shots.â
Soon, Wang Yang had one hand on the black camera, looking at the lens on the other side, smiling and saying, âMichael, Iâm shooting you now.â As Michael pressed the shutter, he chuckled and replied, âThen go for it, hey Yang, can you be a bit more serious? You know that recently both you and âDistrict 9â have been quite serious.â
I donât think so, Iâve been pretty funny lately,â Wang Yang shrugged with a smile, he just didnât want to be that serious, which was why he had requested not to wear a suit this time; now, he was wearing a youthful and fashionable set of clothes. Over there, Michael Cliff laughed and said, âThen be cooler, cool!â Wang Yang still went along with his request and put on a serious face, after all, on still photos, Michael was the professional, and he said lightly, âOK, I like cool.â
This was a shoot for the cover photo for TIME magazine coming out in two weeks, and it was also his second time gracing the cover of TIME. When he received the invitation, Wang Yang was a bit surprised; it made sense for entertainment magazines like People or Vanity Fair, but TIME magazine had always been âcoolâ towards him. Was it because this time âDistrict 9â had the potential to become the highest-grossing R-rated movie in history? Had it caused many people to suffer nightmares?
Regardless, he had agreed to it, as it was a great opportunity for the promotion of âDistrict 91 in its later stages.
However, to people like Michael Cliff and others, it seemed quite normal for the marvelous Yang to be a TIME cover figure again; otherwise, that would have been strange. His first TIME cover was in September 1999 due to the great success and social impact of âHigh School Musical,â and he was hailed as a âphenomenon-level marvelous director.â The cover slogan of TIME back then was: âThe Next âKing of the Worldâ.â
Now, three years had passed, and the former DV kid had already proven himself, and the public consensus was that he wouldnât be James Cameron, wouldnât be Steven Spielberg, and wouldnât be Robert Zemeckis⦠he would only be another great director, the perpetually marvelous director Wang Yang.
In those three years, whether it was creating the classic biopic âThe Pursuit of Happynessâ at the age of 20, causing a sensation again that same year with âJuno,â or becoming the youngest nominee for Best Director at the Golden Globes, he had had enough achievements to grace the cover of TIME, but that had not happened back then.
But now, the magnificent work âDistrict 9/ which had put the entire planet in a state of oppression, marked the strong return of the marvellous Yang after a âdisappearanceâ of two years. The terrifying subtext, the top-selling R-rating, the great filmâ¦the editors of TIME could no longer sit idly by, or else how could this publication be called a historical record?
When was the first time you shot something?â In the reception room, interviewer Dennis Waller and Wang Yang were sitting on the sofa facing each other. He was interviewing the young director for the second time, but unlike the previous interview, which mainly asked about âattitude after successâ and âprospects for the future,â this time he seemed particularly interested in the marvelous Yangâs childhood and growth experiences. This was also a biographical interview.
Wang Yang was immediately intrigued; the first time shooting something? An old black-and-white scene flashed through his mind, with a guy carrying a small camera strolling around⦠Thinking back on the past amusements, he couldnât help but smile; how could he have forgotten? Looking at Dennis Waller, he grinned and said, âAt age 12,1 shot a clip of pedestrians coming and going on the street with a Super8 camera.â
Back then, there was no Mini-DV, so I was actually known as Super8-Boy. Hearing him say this, Dennis Waller laughed heartily. Those who knew the marvelous Yang wouldnât be unaware of DV films and âParanormal Activity,â which were two of his tags; it was his very first appearance as âmarvelous Yang.â He jotted down notes rapidly on paper, laughing and saying, âIt looks like this is going to be the cover slogan for this issue.â
Talcing a sip of coffee, Wang Yang smiled with a reminiscing curl of his lips and said, âBack then, I had been dreaming of being a director for several years. That Super8 I bought at a flea market, a Nizo-148XL, white shell with a black lens, very cool; I also bought two reels of 8MM film. Oh my! They took all my savings, 300 US dollars.â
Wang Yang shook his head, smiling at the memory of his excitement back then; he sighed, âI feel like I was scammed now, but at the time, I was very, very happy and excited. Wow!â He mimicked holding a camera and laughed, âWith this thing, I could be a director, I could make movies! I put all my savings and thoughts into it, ready to do something big! I thought up a story, I called a few classmates, and thenâ¦â
âWhat happened in the end? The camera broke?â Dennis asked with a frown. Wang Yang nodded reluctantly and said, âIt broke suddenly with a pop just after a few days of shooting; I think it was broken all along, and I was just lucky to have it work for a few days.â Dennis gave a regretful smile and inquired, âSo what did you do? Did you take it for repairs, or ask your parents for help?â
No, I donât like asking my parents or family for help.â Wang Yang chuckled; it was indeed annoying back then, his passion stifled, he sighed and said, âI was out of money, so I decided to fix it myself. I thought taking it apart and cleaning it would do the trick, but it only got worse. It was really heartbreaking.â
Dennis asked with great interest, âIs that Supers camera still around? And those two reels with your very first work on them? They must be so precious. Wang Yang laughed lightly and nodded, âTheyâre in San Francisco. Although I hate it, I wouldnât throw it away.â As Dennis continued to take swift notes, he commented, âSo you started playing with shooting pretty early.â
Wang Yang nodded again and said, âAfter that time, whenever I wanted to film something, I would rent a Super8 to shoot some 8MM short films.â He shrugged and added, âThen it was âParanormal Activityâ.â
How would you describe your childhood?â Seeing that the topic had ended, Dennis Waller asked a new question.
Wang Yang rolled his eyes upward in thought and said, âHmm, my childhood? Childhood means before the age of 12, right? So that would be before the Super8 incident, haha!â He laughed a few times before continuing, âIt was great, carefreeâpracticing Kung Fu, watching movies every week, playing sports, hanging out, and fighting. You know, there were always a few bullies in school, but sorry, I wasnât afraid of them.â
When I was in school, those annoying guys would often hit my head,â Dennis Waller sighed, looking back with displeasure, and asked, âSo, are you saying that your childhood was spent happily?â Wang Yang widened his eyes with a look of incredulity, as if to say âhow could that be,â and explained, âThere were always some childhood troubles and regrets, I was no exception. But you could say I grew up happy.â
Okay thenâ¦â Dennis Waller nodded, then with a gossipy tone, chuckled and asked, âWhat kind of role did Jessica play in your childhood?â The first time Wang Yang was interviewed for the cover of TIME, he had spoken about their relationship as kids, and everyone thought they would break up soon, but now it had been over three years. Now doing a second cover interview with Wang Yang, he didnât forget to ask about this aspect.
Oh!â Wang Yang exclaimed as if electrified, he sat up straight and seriously said, âWhat role? I donât know, I need to think carefully about this question, canât let her get angry or disappointed. Dude, donât write that down, okay!â Dennis Waller immediately raised his right hand holding the pen and chuckled, âDonât worry!â Wang Yang thought about it and then said very seriously, âA crucial role, she gave me more opportunities to fight, I loved her.â
Both of them laughed out loud. Wang Yang pointed at the notebook in Dennis Wallerâs hand and said with a laugh, âJust write that down. Plus, Jessie was my best girl friend at the time, we could talk about anything. But then she transferred schools and left, and I was really upset at the time.â He frowned as he recalled the misunderstanding that she didnât consider him a good friend, âHow could she just leave? But she did, all of a sudden, without a word to me, without leaving a single note.â
Really, that happened? Dennis Waller asked with curiosity, âWhat happened? Wang Yang spread his hands, laughed spitefully, and said, âItâs like with Wikus and his wife. Actually, she did leave a farewell letter for me, but some jerk stole it, and I never saw it. Since then, I always misunderstood her, thinking, âWhat did that girl consider me? Some insignificant passerby? An idiot?â That is one of the less happy things of my childhood.â
So we understand why you dealt with Wikus and his wife that way?â Dennis Waller asked with a frown and a smile, his ballpoint pen racing across the paper. Wang Yang shrugged and laughed, âMaybe, but Wikus had it much worse than I did.â Dennis Waller hummed in acknowledgment, looked at him and asked a key question seriously, âWhat do you think the impact of your childhood was on you?â
His face full of contemplation, he said, âOther than âextraordinary,â we donât know how else to define you. You can make the vibrant and sunny âHigh School Musicalâ; the touching âThe Pursuit of Happyness,â about never giving up on your dreams; and the warm and humorous âJuno,â all so happy! But âDistrict 9â is as oppressive as a nightmare; âParanormal Activityâ can scare people to deathâ¦â
Actually, itâs not easy to define anyone; weâre all complex beings. Facing different things, we also have different moods, and what you think at 20 can change by 25, or 30.â Wang Yang thought about it and continued, âI like to become different people experiencing different stories. Sounds a bit like an actor, doesnât it? Ha! A happy and beautiful childhood leads to an optimism in life that outweighs the pessimism.â
After Wang Yang finished his cover interview with TIME, a few days later, the screening week from August 9 to 15 came to an end. In the second week of August, four new films were released: Sony Pictures Entertainmentâs $70 million budget action crime film âxXx,â independent film company Rialto Film Companyâs $38 million budget action comedy âSpy Kids 2,â and Warner Brothersâ $50 million budget action crime film âBlood Type Puzzle.â
With three action new releases in one breath, showing in 3,374, 3>3O7> and 2,525 theaters respectively, they all seemed ambitious, as if aiming to conquer the end-of-summer market. In their first week, they took in $35-21 million, $15.75 million, and $8.94 million in box office, ranking second, fourth, and sixth on the weekly chart. Fifth place was the comedy âAustin Powersâ with $10.44 million, and third place was âThe Omenâ with $20.85 million.
In those two weeks, critics and the movie-going public liked to use words like âcliched,â âdull,â and âboringâ for the new releases, including this weekâs three new films; they also liked to use words like ânovel,â âastonishing,â and âgreatâ for one particular film.
That would be âDistrict 9,1 which continued to top the North American box office weekly chart, strangling the three new releases in 3,758 theaters. This week, the number of its screening theaters increased by 208, and it continued to sweep across North America with a storm-like force, causing more audiences to curse âFUCK!â and rate it on IMDb and Rotten Tomatoes, where it still held scores of 8.9/8.8; audience approval dropped to 87%, with some angry fans throwing the occasional scathing review.
I truly regret watching this movie! It felt like eating an apple rotten with maggots, and the worst part is, those damned maggots keep wriggling around in your stomach!â Alan K, who gave a scathing review, commented like this; and Ian W, who gave it one star, directly blasted the director: âBest Director wants the whole world to taste what itâs like to be in prison with him! What a surprising bastard!â
Amidst praise and curses, âDistrict 9â swept up a box office of $74.38 million in its second week! Its North American total box office climbed to $205 million, which also catapulted it to the fourth spot in the R-rated movie total box office charts, with the front three scores at $234, $232, and $216 million respectively. Judging by the current situation, âDistrict 9â is set to become the top-grossing R-rated film of all time, needing just one more weekend.
The number of critic reviews on Rotten Tomatoes has increased to 240, with 10 rotten reviews and 230 fresh, bringing the freshness score for the general public down to 95%, while it remains at 95% for top critics.
The reason I donât like âDistrict 91 is because its world looks terrible and ridiculous, not innovative at all, and both humans and aliens in it are equally foolish! Moreover, if this sort of thing really happened, Wang Yang, living in Beverly Hills, would be the first to spit on the prawnâs homes.â â Michael Fox, The Baltimore Sun; ââDistrict 9â is like an eight-legged monster that seems to want to say something, but ends up saying nothing at all. Itâs a comedy with absolutely no enjoyment to be had.â â Kyle Smith, New York Postâ¦
However, the overwhelming praise has completely drowned out those few buzzing mosquito-like ridicules.
After a summer of movie-watching, âDistrict 9â is a very timely antidote.â â David Hoffman, San Francisco Chronicle; âThe most heart-wrenching, convincing, classic sci-fi parable. Iâm talking about âPlanet of the Apesâ in 1968, as well as âDistrict 91 in 2002.â â Scott A. Mantz, Access Hollywood; âIf youâre looking for a movie to shake your heart and soul, humans, this is it.â â Ken Hanke, Cinema Signalâ¦
And naturally, the second-week overseas box office of âDistrict 9â has come out, with audiences from over 40 countries and regions spending another 104 million US dollars, bringing the overseas total to 291 million; the global total now stands at 496 million! This has also broken Wang Yangâs personal box office record, with the previous highest for his four films being âHigh School Musicalâ at 411 million, and this number will continue to increase.
Aside from joining the â2 Billion Global Box Office Club,â Wang Yang will soon add a few more directing titles and records, such as âYoungest Single Film 500 Million,â âYoungest Single Film 600 Million,â⦠and there are plenty of media voices calling out for âYoungest Oscar Best Director Nomination.â
The rave reception of âDistrict 91 in the critical community is visible to everyone, and these praises are also published in the media newspapers. This leads to another topic of interest: at next yearâs 75th Academy Awards, what kind of performance will the masterpiece âDistrict 9â display? But first, as a cult film, a sci-fi film, what nominations will it receive?
Best Visual Effects? Best Sound Editing? Best Sound? The Oscars have, for decades, fobbed off many excellent science fiction films with these technical awardsâis this the foreseeable destiny for âDistrict 9â?
But media that last year said âItâs likely a miracle already if âChocolateâ isnât the Best Director, let alone getting nominatedâ now have a totally different voice: ââDistrict 91 will definitely be a hot favorite for next yearâs Oscars, it has the credentials and the right!â
The sorrowful, tense, and bleak score, canât move the old ears of the Oscar jury? Robert Downey Jr.âs tear-inducing, genius performance, canât moisten the old tear ducts of the Oscars? And the script, stemming from Kafkaâs âThe Metamorphosis,â that permeates with sadness, canât touch that old heart?â
As for Best Picture and the âpresumedâ Best Director for Wang Yang, Yahoo Entertainment is more excited and analyses it quite rationally. In recent years, there have been many great works in the sci-fi genre that are significant and influential to the system setup of sci-fi filmsâlike âTerminator 2â and âThe Matrixâ, etc.
Some of them are commercial films, and itâs normal for the Oscars to shut them out; whereas, aspects like âThe Matrixâ discussing the illusion of reality, also arenât mainstream topics that win various awards.
But âDistrict 9,â while novel and unique, is filled with a plethora of mainstream topics. The entire movie explores human nature, including aspects of good and evil; it can also be seen as another of the Oscarsâ favorites, anti-racism; there are also traces of societal habits, freedom, anti-war, etc., all of which, together, create an indescribably powerful, sad impact.
District 9â² is like a lavish buffet where you can taste humanity, try a bit of anti-racism, and various other delicious dishes.â â Charles Hewitt, Empire Magazine; âHowâs this for a suggestion? Everyone must go to the cinema to watch âDistrict 9,â to make this world a better place.â â Chris Baumbray, Movie Market.
The editors at Yahoo Entertainment wrote: âThereâs no doubt âDistrict 9â is grand enough to earn the nominations it deserves, Iâm talking about Best Picture and Best Director.â
Itâs just the shaky pseudo-documentary camera work, the insane B-movie gore, and sci-fi film⦠No matter how excellent it is, these âOscar taboosâ still exist. So can it help the sci-fi genre return to the Oscar Best Picture nomination list after 20 years since âE.T.â in 1983? Could the 23-year-old Wang Yang become the fourth person after Stanley Kubrick, George Lucas, and Steven Spielberg to receive an Oscar Best Director nomination with a sci-fi film?
Life is like a box of chocolates, you never know what youâre gonna get.â Yahoo Entertainment ended with a quote from Wang Yang last year, which is also what Forrestâs mom said.
However, as âDistrict 9â was about to become the champion of R-rated movie box office in North America and its global box office surged like a super blockbuster, some media jokingly but factually said, âAs everyone knows, the Oscars donâ t really like movies with too high a box office. If Wang Yang still wants to get Best Director, âDistrict 9â better be pulled from theaters right now!â
Naturally, this was an impossibility. The days of summer passed quickly, and in the blink of an eye, the screening week of August 16th to 22nd came to a close. With some schools starting the new semester, the total box office in North America for that week had fallen by 23.5%, amounting to only $162.17 million.
Within this big pie, the smallest slice went to the Rialto Film Companyâs re- release of the 1952 Italian movie âTears in the Wind,â which earned $653 in one theater, ranking in the 125th place; ranking first was still âDistrict 9,â which continued to dominate the August movie market with a box office of $48.67 million in 3770 theaters. From August 2nd to the 22nd, it had been the box office champion for three consecutive weeks.
Following in second place was âxXxâ with $20,153,400 and the newly released âBlue Crushâ at $19,948,700. This $25 million romance movie starred Kate Bosworth and Michelle Rodriguez. As good friends, Wang Yang had also sent a text message to Michelle congratulating her; then, in fourth place was âThe Omenâ with $15.67 million.
$48.67 million brought âDistrict 9âsâ total North American box office to $253 million! It officially surpassed âBeverly Hills Copâ with $234 million, becoming the highest-grossing R-rated movie in North American history! Of course, if adjusted for inflation, âDistrict 9â wasnât yet the outright champion, but it had only been in theaters for three weeks.
Professional analysts from Fire Movie predicted that its final North American box office should be within the range of $320 million to $350 million; but âBeverly Hills Copâ did not have a three-week overseas box office of $358 million, its total overseas box office was $81.6 million.
The third-week overseas box office for âDistrict 9â was precisely $67.12 million, and combined with the North American box office of $358 million, the global total reached $608 million! Perhaps in the not-too-distant future, the alien prawns would climb to the height of $700 million in total box office. This was also market analysis from Fire Movie and competitors; good movies combined with viral marketing once again achieved a comprehensive victory.
Age 22, highest box office for a single movie at $608 million, a total box office of $2.1 billion for five directed movies, averaging $420 million per movie⦠All these insane numbers added up to Wang Yang. His fan base naturally soared rapidly, with daily clicks on his blog skyrocketing, and IP addresses coming from all over the world, generating various messages in different languages: âYouâre So Amazing!â âI love your movie! Can you give me a kiss? I love you!! âTueres grande!â /cliffihVc!ââ¦
As entertainment media were also competing to report this kind of âmiracle reality show,â the latest issue of TIME magazine hit the shelves, with none other than Wang Yang on the cover, wearing a shirt and jeans, one hand resting on a camera. After much thought, TIME ultimately chose the nickname that the public was most familiar with as the cover slogan: âMr. Magic-Young.â
Jessica leaned back on the fabric sofa, holding an issue of TIME and avidly reading Wang Yangâs interview. She suddenly came upon content about herself, her eyes lighting up, and after reading she looked up at Wang Yang playing with Danny across the room, asking with a beaming smile, âYang, were you very angry at that time? I mean, when I suddenly left.â
What?â Wang Yang turned his head to glance at her, seeing her bright smile, he couldnât help but smile as well, and with a frown, he asked, âAre you really happy?â Jessica playfully rolled her eyes before nodding and saying, âYes, I am quite happy!â Him being angry meant he cared; if he didnât care at all, then what did that make her? She asked with a curious smile, âDid you ever curse me out or anything?â
Haha, seems like someone wants to be cursed at?â Wang Yang laughed as he patted Dannyâs head, then walked towards the sofa, and while laughing he said, âWell, maybe, I had almost forgotten. But now that you mention it, it all comes back to me, I used to curse every day âthat damn J ASS
ica!!
JASSICA? Jessica was momentarily stunned, then she couldnât help but laugh out loud. Holding the TIME magazine, she hit Wang Yang, who had just sat down beside her, laughing, âYou are so petty! But hahaâ¦â She barely managed to stop her laughter, then, gritting her teeth, she said with a laugh, âIâve also cursed you out a lot, that damnâ¦â
As she was thinking, Wang Yang shrugged again with a laugh and said, âJASSICA!â