As the director of several classics spanning two continents and a legend in his chosen arena, John Woo is eminently qualified to pass judgment on whether or not any given filmmaker possesses the intangibles required to carve out a successful career behind the camera.
After revolutionising the face of action cinema in Hong Kong by stylising the shit out of A Better Tomorrow, The Killer, and Hard Boiled, all three of which comfortably rank as among the greatest ever made, Woo ended up inspiring a raft of filmmakers. These include Quentin Tarantino, Robert Rodriguez, Luc Besson, the Wachowksis, and John Wick‘s Chad Stahelski.
His decade-long Hollywood sabbatical didn’t go exactly to plan, but Mission: Impossible II endures as one of the rare Tom Cruise productions where the A-list megastar deemed himself as being completely subservient to the director. Face/Off can also comfortably go toe-to-toe with his very best work after he stuffed the lightning back into the bottle for a deranged, delirious, and all-round delightful action extravaganza.
The film would never have worked as well as it did without the pitch-perfect pairing of John Travolta and Nicolas Cage in the lead roles, who hammed it up to high heaven both as their original characters and exaggerated versions of themselves. Face/Off was initially envisioned with Arnold Schwarzenegger and Sylvester Stallone taking top billing, and while it would have been a neat gimmick, it wouldn’t have been the same.
It was hardly a rousing success, and the fact Tommy Wiseau is a fan probably says more than enough about the quality on display. Still, while Woo acknowledged “the movie didn’t work everywhere,” he believes the first-time director “did a really great job”.
According to Woo, “the way he directed the actors was brilliant,” with director Cage immediately letting the viewer know “who this guy is and what kind of style this movie is”. Sonny was barely given a release, was greeted with an apathetic shrug by the small number of people who got around to seeing it, and at no point has the meme-friendly star even considered directing again.
And yet, one of action cinema’s all-time greats puts Cage above every other unsung filmmaker in the entire industry, which is nothing if not bizarre. It would be fair to say Woo is firmly in the minority because there’s hardly been an outcry over Cage going full Vin Diesel and refusing to embrace his innate directorial gifts ever again.
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