John Woo: From Hong Kong To Hollywood, The Killer And Face/Off
Essay Preview: John Woo: From Hong Kong To Hollywood, The Killer And Face/Off
Report this essay
John Woo: from Hong Kong to Hollywood, The Killer and Face/Off
John Woo and his “heroic bloodshed” have revolutionized and rejuvenated the action genre, combining melodrama with action to create the male melodrama, in which he explores the codes of masculinity while redefining them. Robert Hanke says that “explosive pyrotechnics seem to be privileged over plot, narrative or character” (Hanke 41) and yet notes that Jillian Sandell maintains the opinion that Woo does not “celebrate this violence, but rather uses it to represent a nostalgia for a lost code of honor and chivalry” (Hanke 1999: 45). While characterized by violence, Woos films define masculinity within a changing world. He does not set out to make violent films, defending A Better Tomorrow by saying “Its not a gangster movie. Its a film about chivalry, about honor, but set in the modern world. I want to teach the new generation: What is friendship? What is brotherhood? What have we lost? What we have to get back.” (Logan 1995: 116), a statement that can be applied to both The Killer (1989) and Face/Off (1997). In The Killer, Jeff and Stanley are nostalgic about the past, saying how things have changed. Loss is a literal theme in both movies, as Jeff tries to regain Sallys sight and in Face/Off Archer has lost his son and seeks to regain a sense of identity and purpose, and ultimately a son. Woo makes his films to fill this lack that he sees in the modern world.
He is influenced by many different films and national cinemas, and his heroes are modern incarnations of the chivalric xia figures of martial arts cinema in the 1960s, “avatars of a fallen group of knightly heroes” (Williams 2000: 143). In The Killer, Jeff is a noble, loyal and chivalric, a “twentieth-century version of [a] Chinese knight with traditional codes of loyalty and friendship yet still relevant to the contemporary world”(Williams 2000: 148). In this modern interpretation he is a gangster, yet still encompasses all of these characteristics, a break from the xia figures who were either lawful or operating outside of the laws influence. Woo gives us a new kind of male protagonist, one that “combines physical violence and emotional intensity” (Hanke 1999: 39), visible from the start of The Killer. Jeff is introduced to us as cool and calm, casually shooting a room full of people. This expressionless killing is contrasted with the following scene which shows his wounds being tended to in a close up of his face that displays that pain and emotion that he is feeling. This opposition between violence and sensitivity is clearly demonstrated by the characters of Caster Troy and Sean Archer in Face/Off when they swap faces, and they must appropriate the characteristics of the other in order to survive, “the binary logic of either violent or emotionally sensitive is dissolved into both violent and sensitive” (Hanke 1999: 53). Similarly in The Killer, Li is a mirror image for Jeff, the only difference being a badge. Woos films are based on these oppositions, particlularly good/evil, which is visible in the images he uses at the end of both films, the shootouts taking place in a church with slow motion action.