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Wang's world

Director Wayne Wang’s films swing so abruptly between arty indies and Hollywood hokum, they can make your head spin. But his two new movies show him at his best.

By Jonathan Kiefer, Photograph by Julia Galdo

Moviegoers haven’t had an easy time keeping up with Wayne Wang. For more than 25 years, directing works based on original material, adaptations, and collaborations, the San Francisco– and New York–based filmmaker has seemed to sashay back and forth from the art house to the multiplex (and to some points unknown) entirely at his own pace. He’s kind of an oddball that way, lucky for us. But it’s kept him from having a signature style, from making pictures that someone might categorize as “classic Wayne Wang.” The movies that probably make Wang the most money are the ones we identify least with him: If you’re thinking, “That J-Lo flick Maid in Manhattan—that was him?” you’re not alone.

Happily, in his two new films, Wang has swung back to doing what many of us think he does best: small-scale, closely observed personal tales more calmly quotidian than indulgently movie-ish. A Thousand Years of Good Prayers and The Princess of Nebraska may never make it above the mainstream radar, but they’re right in line with the films that made us first cherish Wang’s work.

It’s no surprise to learn that both movies were adapted from short stories by Oakland writer and fellow Chinese immigrant Yiyun Li. Wang’s world often seems constitutionally congruent with the Bay Area: It’s full of characters who are somehow displaced, and whose relations with their families—or, more broadly, with their communities—become strained. We watch and often relate as they endure crises, or at least puzzling ambiguities, of identity.

A Hong Kong native, Wang came to the Bay Area in the late ’60s to study film at Oakland’s California College of the Arts (formerly California College of Arts and Crafts). Perhaps because he was an outsider making his way in, he saw the self-righteousness in the era’s heady atmosphere of politically charged self-awareness. Wang preferred making fictional documentaries, feeling that the conventional docs of the day seemed too piously certain they’d cornered the market on truth.

His feature debut was Chan Is Missing (1982), a moody, open-ended voyage into San Francisco’s Chinatown that blurred the boundary between fiction and documentary. In Chan’s skeletal plot, two Chinatown cab drivers try to track down the fresh-off-the-boat Chinese friend who’s vanished with thousands

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