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News / Columns / Five Favorite Films
Five Favorite Films With Bai Ling
The star of this week's Crank: High Voltage opens up about movies, her career, and her eccentric off-screen persona.
by Jen Yamato | April 14, 2009
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Bai Ling

Rotten Tomatoes caught up with actress Bai Ling (Red Corner, Southland Tales) on the verge of her latest film, Crank: High Voltage, to talk movies and learn more about the bold and sensual artist, who at times is better known for her off-screen persona than her expansive body of work. Below, find out which romantic classics and modern films Bai Ling names among her Five Favorite Films and read on for our in-depth conversation about her work, her life, and her pursuit of happiness as we peel back the layers of the force of nature known as Bai Ling. Click to go directly to our interview with Bai Ling.








Casablanca (1942, 96% Tomatometer)
CasablancaMentally, Casablanca connects with my world. It's very romantic, about giving and testing, and trusting and loving... And there's the romantic music. Everything is [in line with] my tastes of romance. It's also about an unfulfilled love, which makes everything more beautiful because you can't have it. It's just human nature. If you have it -- you see the person, you see the romance -- then the story becomes practical, like reality. But because it's unfulfilled, it's always a fantasy because we add so much of our own beauty, and romance, and poetry, into it.

Also, Casablanca is about the sacrifice of giving love. Real love, I think, is unconditional; you give your love away to love somebody. Otherwise it's not real love, it's possessive, it's ownership.



Traffic (2000, 92% Tomatometer)
TrafficI like movies like Gone with the Wind, or The Unbearable Lightness of Being, but I'll actually choose Traffic. When I did not speak the language, I watched the movie sex, lies, and videotape, and I didn't understand; I thought American movies were always blockbusters, hard movies, with action and male leads. But that film was like pieces of life, pieces of dreams. I did a movie called Nipples, based on my dreams, with different characters coming together...very sexy, and very modern, and very open. I think that's something that's very contemporary and I didn't think a lot of American directors were [that way]. [Steven Soderbergh]'s mind is very modern. I like Traffic because he shot it like a documentary, but there's mystery, there's modernity. There's an unknown danger in it. When the characters are crossing the border -- I just like the momentum of life, when people cross each other, when lives cross each other. In that moment of life, what can happen.



In the Mood For Love (2001, 88% Tomatometer)
In the Mood For LoveWong Kar-Wai is one of my favorite directors from Asia. I'm a natural romantic. I feel like his movies --- slow motion, the momentum of people, even a clock running --- are non-traditional filmmaking. Normal movies [have scenes set up] like, I talk to you; you talk to me. Those kinds of movies are boring to me, but his films are advanced. He's also extremely private and personal. His stories are all about innocent love, sort of like teenage love. How people need; how you love. They're very, very romantic. When I talk about it, I feel this slow motion romance, high heels, the mystery of women, sexy, walking by. I recognize things in my soul that are unspoken; a lot of those longings, and unfulfilled romances, and dreams within [Wong Kar-Wai's] films -- they make me feel that.



Red Corner (1997, 33% Tomatometer)
Red CornerI'd like to pick Red Corner, because Bai Ling's in it. [Laughs] Actually, I choose it because out of all the movies that have Asian leading characters, it's the first to have the most feminine -- the most brilliant, modern, intelligent, female character ever in a Hollywood film that portrayed Asian characters. In all other films, it's a mystery, romance, or kung fu; but here, I played a lawyer, a contemporary woman. And she has a romance with this sex symbol --- Richard Gere. That combination is really rare on the silver screen, in Hollywood.

I play a lawyer and I fall in love; I'm under a Communist government and helping a foreign man. There's also a lot of unspoken love underneath. I would sacrifice my life for him. She gives on many, many levels; she's not only tough and sexy, but there's intelligence behind it, and a total giving of unconditional love for this man for whom she would die and do anything for. There's a beauty to her giving up everything for a man whom she's helping while she's under danger and pressure from the government --- choosing between a country's love, and being in danger of being destroyed and never seeing this lover that she would do anything for. It's extremely beautiful and romantic to my heart and my soul, and I have a fantastic and beautiful relationship with my co-star, Richard Gere. So that's one of my favorite movies forever, because I'm so close to it. These two [characters] are giving their lives to each other, and that love must remain hidden on the surface of the court system; the modern world is harsh. I like that under the harshness there's a romance, and that romance is so free and so true.

Do you still remember what it was like when you were filming?

When I talk about it, it's like I'm there! I feel emotional, like it's going to make me cry; because I gave my life to the character, and to Richard Gere's character. For me, it's real; it's not acting. And we had this beautiful, loving relationship just like in the movie. You know how sometimes when you're in love for a lifetime, you remember a one-night stand? It's not about the length, it's about the impact and how pure, and how right, that person was to your soul and to your heart in that moment.



Roman Holiday (1953, 98% Tomatometer)
Roman HolidayIt's a very personal choice because when I came to America from mainland China, I was an actress, but I never knew about Hollywood. I had heard of Hollywood but we didn't have access to see Hollywood movies. A photographer was taking pictures of me and said, "You remind me of this actress named Audrey Hepburn." I said, "Who is that?" He said, "Bai Ling, you have to watch her films," and he found me Roman Holiday. That was the first Hollywood movie I'd ever seen. And it's still one of my favorites, because it first introduced me to Hollywood --- beautiful, romantic, very graceful, and elegant. I would like to remake it --- I hope some director can help me, maybe Steven Soderbergh or Wong Kar-Wai. [Laughs] What I remember about those old Hollywood films is that when a leading lady and a leading man meet, they don't have to say anything; you already know they're in love. You root for them; you want them to be together. That's the magic of Hollywood. I think somehow today we've lost a little bit of it, and you don't care as much if two characters get together. But Roman Holiday makes you smile, makes your heart smile, makes your heart sing for these two people. Gregory Peck is gentle and elegant, the kind of tall leading man that I like.

I think we should remake the film. Everybody in America, in Asia, and in Europe, would appreciate it. The beautiful, pure, romantic story --- I wish I would play a role like that, because I have a romantic soul. I'd like to bring that purity to the audience, to have their fantasy fulfilled.


Next: Bai Ling bares all in our no-holds barred interview!

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Comments (1-20 of 35 posts) | Reply
Cicatriz
Cicatriz writes:
on Apr 13 2009 10:28 PM

She was really good in Red Corner.

(Reply to this)
murray m.
murray m. writes:
on Apr 14 2009 12:03 AM

would never of picked her for roman holiday

(Reply to this)
KingSigy
KingSigy writes:
on Apr 14 2009 01:06 AM

She gives some good reasons for picking her own movie and I definitely have to agree with her. Even if that movie is trash, it certainly portrays an Asian woman in a more realistic manner (something that Zhang Ziyi still hasn't figured out with her roles).

(Reply to this)
foolshill
foolshill writes:
on Apr 14 2009 09:12 AM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_F0iOuRNJfU&feature=channel

(Reply to this)
Mann is the Man
Mann is the Man writes:
on Apr 14 2009 09:21 AM

I liked the fact that she explained in depth why she likes all of these films, but by the 4th one, most of her reasoning started to meld together. Also, when she is talking about Red Corner, she is basically blowing herself ("...that character is not only very sexy....."). I know she is referring to the character but still, she seemed to have been hyping herself up a bit. Oh, please tell Bail Ling to stop saying the word romantic.

(Reply to this)
ledawg1138
ledawg1138 writes:
on Apr 14 2009 10:07 AM

Damn, she's hot!

(Reply to this)
whitey_mcwhite
whitey_mcwhite writes:
on Apr 14 2009 10:18 AM

I have to say that I thought her whole deal with Star Wars was hilarious. She was supposed to have a decent sized part in Revenge of the Sith, but then she appeared in Playboy and Lucas cut her from the movie. That was crazy!

(Reply to this)
tomwaitsjr
tomwaitsjr writes:
on Apr 14 2009 12:03 PM

In reply to this comment (#2424730)
KingSigy,

Hey! Leave Zhang Ziyi alone! have you seen her first film, "The Road Home?" Awesome! In fact, all her roles are well done.


(Reply to this)
brentsimon
brentsimon writes:
on Apr 14 2009 12:05 PM

Nice piece, Jen!

(Reply to this)
tomwaitsjr
tomwaitsjr writes:
on Apr 14 2009 12:06 PM

Great Job Jen!

and, KingSigy. . . In the Mood for Love had a kind of sequel called 2046. . . which starred. . .Zhang Ziyi!



(Reply to this)
ledawg1138
ledawg1138 writes:
on Apr 14 2009 02:56 PM

In reply to this comment (#2424927)
I forgot to mention her list. And, it's different, and that's good.

(Reply to this)
willpower
willpower writes:
on Apr 14 2009 04:52 PM

I love her. No really. I love her.

(Reply to this)
steve s.
steve s. writes:
on Apr 14 2009 08:34 PM

she took this very seriously,,,,,gotta respect that

(Reply to this)
eastern2western
eastern2western writes:
on Apr 15 2009 01:15 AM

please go away, out of the very few working asian actresses in hollywood, you just have to show your butt ugly face. I mean come on the whole crazy stripper thing is kind of okay when you were in your 20s and 30s. right now woman, you just look like some 2 dollar street whor who has a 9 inch thick mascara

(Reply to this)
mannsman
mannsman writes:
on Apr 15 2009 12:48 PM

I think that she is a really bad actress, just watch her in her very small role in Southland Tales and you'll see. I hope she doesnt (and dont think that she will) ruin Crank 2, because the first movie was awesome and this one looks really good.

(Reply to this)
Bigbrother
Bigbrother writes:
on Apr 15 2009 01:56 PM

You mean Lucy Lui's roles in the Charlie's Angels movies weren't an accurate representation of Asian women? Well, there's another comfortable illusion shattered.

(Reply to this)
eastern2western
eastern2western writes:
on Apr 15 2009 03:02 PM

be honest in here, hollywood has no good roles for asians. the famouse zhang ziyi told a chinese newspaper that the only roles she was offered in hollywood were either whores, waitresses, dragon ladies, china dolls. that is the reason why she would much rather work in asia instead because she usually gets to pick to work with the best directors, best scripts, and basically the cream of the crop. the bad thing about bai ling is that actually accepts those roles and play them with the worst of her abilities.

(Reply to this)
jokerboy1991
jokerboy1991 writes:
on Apr 15 2009 06:18 PM

"I'm really a genius. I'm so talented. But the stage and the road of opportunities I have are not equal to my talent. Dumplings -- I won four awards. It's just magic. If you give me the stage, I'll make magic for you."
Man, even I don't think that highly of myself! But hey, she's got confidence... Man I can't wait until Crank 2, the first one was so awesome. Also Southland Tales is a guilty pleasure of mine, I won't call it a good movie because its a TOTAL mess but its worth watching.


(Reply to this)
tomwaitsjr
tomwaitsjr writes:
on Apr 15 2009 07:44 PM

Southland tales? I heard it was beyond awful. I kind of want to see it because I enjoyed Donnie Darko a hell of a lot.

(Reply to this)
jokerboy1991
jokerboy1991 writes:
on Apr 15 2009 07:48 PM

In reply to this comment (#2426789)
It is kind of bad, but its just so worth watching because its just such an interesting mess.

(Reply to this)
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