John Woo

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John Woo Essay, Research Paper

The bread-and-butter of the film industry is the action movie. Each summer, audiences can expect to see car chases, gunfights and explosions, and studios can expect to see millions and millions of dollars in return. Though most viewers and critics see these movies as “fluff” entertainment (and rightfully so), there is one director that puts as much heart and soul into his “fluff” as any number of talented directors put into their “serious” movies. His name is John Woo. Even though you may not have heard about him, he is widely considered to be “the best contemporary director of action films working anywhere.”

John Woo, after many years of hard work, has become known as the world’s best action film director. His action sequences have become the stuff of legend and are now the basis from which all other action movies are judged. More importantly, along with the bloodshed, Woo has proven that he can create real characters with real emotions that the audience can sympathize with. Perhaps that is his greatest talent, and perhaps that is why he will become known as one of the greatest directors in the years to come.

John Woo?s style is definitely fast paced an exciting. Mostly throughout all of his movies his themes are good against evil. It is always the case of a standoff between the good guy and the bad guy, in their last battle, always to the death. Woo?s would often use montages to make time go faster, as in Face/Off when the swat team breaks into the house and where Castor Troy kills the men that he once commanded.

Most of the movie is very dark as the subject matter is. Nicholas Cage is all alone in the movie, but on the other hand in The Big Hit, it has a funny theme to it, as often there were parts where one might laugh. Woo also uses special effects well. He combines montages with slow motion to create a tenser environment. Of course Woo directs very fast and furious action sequences in which viewers often get caught up in, mixed in are the duel gun battles and the Mexican standoffs.

Woo is known for action, and this is where a great deal of the “new breed” of action directors (and some old veterans) get their “inspiration” for their action sequences. One of Woo’s trademarks, men shooting it out with a gun in each hand, has almost become a cliché of the action genre. Even Pamela Anderson in the “fluffy” Barb Wire took out the “bad guys” with dual guns blazing. Bruce Willis in Last Man Standing always fights with two guns out, dropping one only to take a drink. Returning to A Low Down Dirty Shame, one character directly mimics Chow Yun-Fat in A Better Tomorrow II by taking out his enemies while sliding backwards down a staircase.

Woo is also known for the “Mexican standoff,” where one or more characters have a “dead lock” on one another. This has been seen in literally dozens of American films in recent years, including Reservoir Dogs, True Romance, Natural Born Killers and 2 Days in the Valley, just to name a few. Woo’s innovative editing techniques, such as the use of “wipes” and freeze-frames have also become mainstays of American action cinema, as has Woo’s use of slow-motion to add dramatics to his action sequences. It is because of all of these influences that many consider John Woo to be the author of all his movies because he is responsible for everything that happens on screen.

He?s a bold visual stylist who stages kinetic scene of over- the- top gunplay with fluid camera movements, extremely long takes, and perfectly timed choreography of movement. Woo’s on the spot improvising that also delivered one of the most amazing gun blazing sequences when in the middle of the movie a full-blooded gunfight erupts, but is played out in balletic slow-motion to Somewhere Over The Rainbow, heard through child’s headphones. The song was put in the represent the child?s innocence, and also to show how that innocence is being corrupted by the violence around him. Woo gets upset when he hears about violence, and when he is angry and directing he thinks, "lets hit the villain with more bullets, lets beat him up just a little bit more."

In a John Woo movie, bullets kill people. Lots of them. Extras do not get up rubbing their heads after being shot as if victims of nothing more than a heavy night on the town. Nor does the flying lead miraculously avoid nixing innocent bystanders. He estimates a body count well into the 80’s for Hard Boiled. But even in these hyper sensitive times, he gets away with it. Possibly because the sequences are so breathtakingly choreographed that the amount of the slaughter is overshadowed by the scene. In an interview Woo explained: “I choreograph action like you?d design a dancing sequence in a musical. I have a sense of the beauty and the rhythm of the action, the atmosphere and the action?s emotional arc. Everything is clear in my mind before I shoot. But like a musical, the rhythm and movement have to be filmed precisely as you thought it out.”

Basically, Woo?s directing is known for its fast pace and furious gunplay. Woo considers himself to be an artist, as he does once and a while get emotional while filming one of his movies. This goes to show that he relates his movies well to real life, and has an understanding of what it takes to become a great director.

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