Lust, Caution wins
Golden Horse awards
TAIWAN
Dec.
10, 2007 (Credits
to Reuters)
Ang Lee's steamy Lust, Caution trotted off
as the big winner on Saturday at the 2007 Golden Horse
awards, the most coveted Chinese-language film prizes,
picking up seven honors including best director and best
film.
Despite its low profile in the West, the Golden Horse is
a spectacular occasion for the Chinese-speaking world,
with top talent from Taiwan, Hong Kong and China turning
out each year for the red-carpet event in Taipei.
Lust, Caution, the favorite going into the star-studded
event, also helped Lee win the award for outstanding
Taiwanese filmmaker of the year.
"This is for the lack of respect that Taiwan has gotten
in the past," Lee said backstage, after getting the
outstanding Taiwanese filmmaker award. "My point of
view, my style are all from Taiwan. So I'm very much
representing Taiwan."
Lust also won best leading actor honors for Hong Kong
star Tony Leung Chiu Wei.
Lust, Lee's most prominent Chinese-language film since
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, won the Golden Lion at
the Venice film festival, and had the advantage of much
stronger publicity than its rivals.
The awards feature mostly films from Taiwan and Hong
Kong. In addition to Lee and Leung, luminaries on this
year's list included Hong Kong film star Aaron Kwok and
China-born Joan Chen, who burst on to the movie scene in
Bernardo Bertolucci's The Last Emperor in 1987.
Chen returned to the limelight at this year's Golden
Horses, picking up the best leading actress award for
her role in The Home Song Stories.
Pop star Jay Chou's directorial debut Secret also did
well, winning awards for best original song and visual
effects, as well as the outstanding Taiwanese film of
the year.
This year's show was also marked by controversy when two
mainland Chinese films Tuya's Marriage and Blind
Mountain, were submitted by filmmakers, only to be
forced to withdraw later.
China, which has claimed sovereignty over self-ruled
Taiwan since the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949,
doesn't allow its movies to compete, though
co-productions between Chinese and foreign houses are
allowed.
Cultural exchanges have increased across the Taiwan
Strait in the last decade, but political relations have
been icy during the seven-year tenure of President Chen
Shui-bian, whose Democratic Progressive Party favors
independence.
Lust, Caution, about a Chinese woman tasked with killing
a Japanese collaborator in Shanghai during World War II,
has also been the subject of controversy, with some
decrying it for being too long and others critical of
its graphic sex scenes.
The film drew additional attention when China said it
would cut some scenes before screening it there.
Despite its success to date, Taiwan was prohibited from
submitting Lust for the Academy Awards foreign film
category after the Academy ruled its cast was too
international.
Lee said he was not optimistic about the film's chances
in the next year's other Academy Award categories, as
the film has not been very well received in the United
States, in part due to its explicit sexual content,
resulting in an adults-only rating.