Translator: 549690339
After spending a night at Mount Sinai Hospital, Wang Yang felt like he was back to himself, even though an annoying cold seemed to just be getting started. But that wouldnât affect his actions; wearing a mask, and led by Rachel, Wang Yang arrived at what she called âthe best place.â As he toured half of the small town and the little high school, he couldnât help but excitedly proclaim, âThis is it, the birthplace of âJunoâ!â
The little town was indeed lovely, with countryside-style architecture that didnât appear sparse. The width of the streets was also very suitable for the filming crew. As for the high school, it was quite ideal too. Although small in size, its environment and playground were serene, exactly the scene âJunoâ needed.
Rachel treated him in a very natural way, without the hot and cold attitude of before, just like before the Thanksgiving phone call. Wang Yang didnât deliberately do or say anything special; he continued to approach her as a âgood friend,â just like Michael Pitt, Zachary, Annie, and Natalieâspeak when you should speak, laugh when you should laugh. That had always been his goal, to be a good friend.
However, those zealous phone calls he used to make, discussing various topics with her, Wang Yang wouldnât dial anymore. He understood this; the girl he should be looking for now was named âJessica.â As for Rachel, he didnât think his charm was so great that this girl would keep being unable to find the feeling of love, always the âback-up.â Time would allow them to become real good friends.
A day later, Rachel went to Los Angeles ahead of time to prepare for the promotion of âHigh School Musical 2.â Wang Yang also welcomed the âJunoâ crew in Toronto, including members of the production team and other staff, as well as main actors like Natalie Portman and Michael Pitt.
In terms of the production team, the photography, lighting, and sound departments were all from âThe Pursuit of Happynessâ crew, while positions like art director, set design, and makeup artist, Wang Yang chose some old buddies from âHigh School Musical.â The cinematographer for âJunoâ was naturally Vale Fest again. After two movies, he went from an unengaged cinematographer to a somewhat famous one in Hollywood. To a certain extent, he was very grateful to Wang Yang, and the pleasant collaboration and built rapport made him turn down several film offers, just waiting for âJunoâ to start shooting.
As for what style and tone to use for filming âJuno,â Wang Yang and Vale Fest had discussed it long ago. âJunoâ was to tell a serious storyâa girlâs pregnancy, her experiences, her life decisions⦠But the way to express it couldnât be serious, not even solemn, or else it would be âSweetheart,â or some other similar failed material. For instance, if âJunoâ were a book, even if it contained the Bible inside, the cover must be a hippie-style skull.
The original version of âJunoâ had many sub-themes, but one core element was about âcelebrating women,â praising the strength and tolerance of women and the âbastardnessâ of men. Women mature earlier than men do; Juno and Paulie, step-parents Vanessa and Markâthey understand love, know how to give love, leading men to grow and move forward. This was also what Juno learned through her pregnancy; thatâs why, in the end, she forgave Paulie and proactively gave her love⦠Anyway, Wang Yang wanted to shoot a different theme, and he didnât believe all men were bastards. Men could also understand love and learn to give it.
Why was âJunoâ successful? What was its winning formula? The most important wasnât the story or its core theme. In a way, its essence and that of âSweetheartâ were no different. âSweetheartâ Novalee was just as strong and tolerant; abandoned by her bastard boyfriend, cheated by her deceitful mother, but she always knew about love and giving, eventually reaping her own happiness. Why was âSweetheartâ praised but not a box-office hit? Because it was too solemn, it wasnât cool.
The fact was that an ordinary audience member going to the cinema isnât there to âreceive a baptismâ or with the mindset of âwhat I should learn,â they simply want to watch a terrific movie, and itâs a bonus if they can have some realization after watching it.
What makes a movie wonderful? The story, characters, visuals, music⦠itâs the entire film. To have its inner beauty discovered and appreciated, one must first deliver on these manifest wonders. And most ordinary audiences wonât delve into the interior; they will just say âit was very insightful,â yet those insights are merely platitudes that everyone knows very well and can recite at a momentâs notice, like âThe Pursuit of Happynessâ and its dreams and pursuit of happiness, or the original âJunoâ and its strong and tolerant women.
What a movie needs to do is figure out how to interpret and package this simple message so that the audience feels âvery insightfulâ after watching it. Thatâs the charm of cinema; thatâs the role and ability of a director. Whatever ideas and thoughts you want to convey, donât talk about them directly; everything should happen quietly, through the story, the characters, good music, editing, etc. Only then can it become a classic film.
The story of âJunoâ isnât complicated or legendary. What if you put Novalee into the flow of âJunoâ and had her tell the story in her gentle way? It wouldnât be interesting. The interesting and cool part is the character âJunoâ herselfâ unique, full of personality, sharp-tongued, overflowing with an alternative charm. When she came to life on the screen, no matter what scene she was in, the audience would be captivated.
Therefore, the two most important aspects of this teenage pregnancy movie are, first, no matter what theme you talk about, donât be serious and earnest; be cool. Second, is to sculpt and act out Juno well. As for the character of Juno, after seeing Natalie Portmanâs latest performance, Wang Yang was not worried at all; the first point isnât the actorâs responsibility,âevery aspect of the filmâs production should serve this goal, like the trendy and humorous lines in the script, and the filmâs visual style and color tone on celluloid.
The outcome of the discussion between Wang Yang and Valerie Faris was still âsunshine.â The color tone of âJunoâ should be like a winter-dayâs sunshine- soft and textural light, which would lessen the severity of the story and warm the hearts of viewers. For the choice of shots, with the experience from âThe Pursuit of Happyness,â it was tentatively decided to use a lot of close-ups and medium shots, naturally to highlight Natalieâs acting, and at the same time, this was the filmâs styleâsmall and warm.
âNo, thatâs not the right feel,â Wang Yang said, shaking his head as he looked at Natalie in front of him. He said to the stylist, Ellie Harper, âI need her to look very special. Right now sheâs justâ¦â His gaze returned to the mirror, to the Natalie with her long hair draped over her shoulders, âShe is just Natalie, without the flavor of the character. How about trying bangs parted to the side, with a ponytail at the back?â Ellie Harper agreed and started to work on Natalieâs hair.
In the spacious makeup room, character styling was underway. Since âJunoâ is a contemporary real-life drama, this task was relatively simple. There was no need to design customized costumes or props, which is why they could tackle it just a few days before shooting. These days were also used for the actors to get familiar and coordinate, to arrange shooting permits for the locations, extras, and other tasks, including the current styling.
The styling for actors like Michael Pitt and Anne Hathaway was easily decided, but Natalie was facing problems. She changed hairstyles several times and Wang Yang was not satisfied. A characterâs styling is essentialâit affects the camera work and the acting. A good hairstyle can elevate acting, while a bad one can ruin it. If Juno was to be cool, then she needed a âcoolâ hairstyle.
Soon, Natalieâs hairstyle was transformed into an Ellen Page-like style, but with a much larger ponytail. Wang Yang had her stand up to try different shooting angles, frontal, side, etc. Again he shook his head, âNo, it still makes your face look a bit big.â Natalie frowned, âIs my face really that big?â Wang Yang scrutinized her and said, âA little bit, yes, and your forehead too.â Natalie glanced at him, shrugged, and said, âUnless weâre shooting âLeon: The Professionalâ now, itâs as big as it is.â
Ellie Harper smiled without joining in the banter and asked, âSo, director, what do we do now? Shall we try a short haircut?â Natalieâs eyes lit up suddenly, and she excitedly said, âGuys, I have a great idea!â Wang Yang asked, âWhat?â She said seriously, âIâll shave off my hair, then wear a mask like yours. How about that, cool, right?â Then she burst into laughter.
âWow, thatâs really cool, it sounds good!â Wang Yang tugged at his own mask and said, âBut you wonât get this mask. Itâs a limited edition. Ellie, shave her head!â Ellie laughed and said OK, picking up the scissors from the makeup table, while Natalie nonchalantly gathered her ponytail and handed it forward. Wang Yang chuckled, âAll right, I think thatâs too cool now; save it for when you do a horror film.â He looked at Ellie Harper and said, âEllie, find a way to make her forehead and face look smaller. Maybe try some scattered bangs, and still keep some down the sidesâ¦â
Before long, Natalieâs hairstyle had changed again. Wang Yang, resting his chin in his hand, scrutinized her carefully. The bangs nicely concealed her forehead, but the long hair still made her look too femininely beautiful. He said, âCut the hair at the back shorter, cutting it to a medium length to see.â Ellie Harper asked, âAre you sure? Once itâs cut, going back will require a wig.â Wang Yang nodded, âYes, Iâm sure.â
The sound of snipping echoed as Ellie Harperâs scissors gradually shortened Natalieâs hair. Wang Yang observed the process, commenting, âShorter, a bit shorterâ¦â Natalie blinked, feeling that he seemed more like a stylist.