The Half Of It Director Alice Wu Doesn't Deal In Binaries

The Half Of It Director Alice Wu Doesn't Deal In Binaries




By Crystal Bell


Director Alice Wu is aware the power of a deadline. If her years as a software engineer for Microsoft taught her anything, it's that true productivity is achieved through self-imposed stress (and better time management skills, nevertheless that's besides the point). In late 2016, she applied that knowledge to a script she had been mulling over for months. The filmmaker cut a check for $1,000, sent it to a trusted friend, and made them promise: If she didn't finish the draft in five weeks, the cash could be donated to the National Rifle Association. The guilt, coupled with constant pressure from her close circle of progressive companions, was just the motivation she required to finish it.


So in a weird way, Wu has the NRA to thank for what would eventually become The Half of It.


The charm of the Netflix film is that it focuses on what most high school movies don't: the bottled-up resentment towards family member, companions, and circumstances brought on by the idea that you have to have your whole life figured out by graduation. Ellie Chu is a sharp, bookish senior who's floated through high school without producing any lasting friendships. She hates attention, and her only real companion is her jaded English language teacher. Yet Ellie is content to exist on the periphery, making money where she can by writing her classmates' essays and helping her Chinese immigrant, single father adapt to life in smalltown America. She harbors a secret crush on Aster (Alexxis Lemire), the school's irregular "It" girl. She's smart, funny, well-read, and pretty. So it's no surprise as soon as the adorably awkward Paul (Daniel Diemer), a jock with a golden heart and an adventurous palate, also catches feelings for her — and he hires Ellie to support him woo his dream girl through a series of love letters and texts.


Netflix / KC Bailey
Yes, it's a modern riff on the classic Cyrano tale, a Victorian-era French play in which a uncomely poet woos his dream girl with the help of a handsome man, although The Half of It isn't a regular young-adult romance. "It's a little more melancholy," Wu tells MTV News. "It's set while in that period in high school where feelings are very raw, and things are awkward and funny, yet there's also just this deep sense of loneliness that I think pervades that time."


It's a familiar theme for Wu, whose strength as a storyteller is her tender, humanist approach. She released her first — and only other — film, Saving Face, nearly 16 years back. Written for her mother, the multilingual rom-com is loosely inspired by her own coming out as a lesbian to her customary Chinese family member. "I was attempting to find a way for my mind to understand," she says. "She knew I was gay, yet it was not a comfortable topic for her." Wu's fictional proxy, Wil (Michelle Krusciec), is a young, witty Asian-American surgical resident who's done everything to prepare her widowed mother (Joan Chen) delighted with the exception of the one thing that really matters: finding an appropriate Chinese man to marry. Although as much as Saving Face is a love story between pragmatic Wil and confident Vivian (Lynn Chen), it's also a tale of mothers and daughters — of flawed people with good intentions "trying to do the perfect with what they believe is the ideal out there," Wu says.


The same thing applies to the personae dramatis of The Half of It. "In another movie, [Ellie and Wil] would not be the main characters," she says. "Maybe they'd be side characters. Maybe they'd be extras. Maybe they're not even in the movie, although I've made them the main characters. And that's in part because I believe we're all more similar than we're different. You can strip away race or gender identity, our sexuality, our ethnicity, where we think we're from, our class backgrounds. In the event you strip all that stuff away, I think that, fundamentally, most people want the same things. We hope to love. We hope to be loved. We aspire to belong, whichever that feels like. We want some sense of purpose in our lives. It's mainly those sorts of things that we're all striving for."


As protagonists, Wil and Ellie are cut from the same cloth. And if you're lucky enough to know Wu, then that cloth generally cotton, typically plaid) will likely look familiar. "I've never had an individual [friend] watch one of my movies and not at the end be like, 'Yeah, your actor's basically doing you. It's exactly you,'" she says. "My costume designers on both films basically began picking clothes that I wore." Wil and Ellie are clever and practical to a fault and uncomfortable in their bodies, and Wu is self-aware enough to know that this isn't purely the act of her subconscious. (Though, she admits, "Nobody wants to think they're that narcissistic.") Her characters are pieces of her, physical and emotional reflections of her thoughts and insecurities.


"My characters are essentially repressed Asian nerds," she says with a laugh.


Wu writes from an emotional place. Saving Face was influenced by her hope to connect with her mother, and The Half of It was written with another objective entirely: to pen a coming-of-age narrative that ends at the starting. Saving Face finds Wu grappling with coming out to her family; The Half of It is Wu coming out to herself. And that singular loneliness — any time as soon as you don't feel like you know anyone, especially yourself — is what permeates Ellie's story.


Netflix / KC Bailey
"Neither of my films are about getting the girl," she notes. Rather, The Half of It is intimately introspective. Inspired by Wu's own teenage tumult, it depicts the unlikely friendship between closeted, eloquent Ellie and the last person trim become close to: straight, white, tongue-tied Paul. It was personalized for Wu, who noticed her own Paul as a teenager while she required him most. "At that point my parents were not speaking to me," she recalls. "I was deeply terrified While I came out to myself because I didn't know any gay people. And to have this friendship with this guy who didn't treat me any differently, [who] just accepted me as I was, was an impressive thing."


The Half of It, she says, was place on Earth out of a lingering question: "What happens in case you meet your soulmate, only you have no aspire to have sex with them?"


To illustrate her point, Wu uses Plato's Symposium as a clever framing device. The Greek text specifics the myth that human beings were place on Earth with four legs, four arms, and also a head with two faces. One day, in a fit of jealousy, Zeus tore us in two, and right now romantic love between two people is the only thing that can make us whole again. The Half of It, although, doesn’t deal with such a stringent binary. Paul says it himself: there really are so several ways to love. It's not that we're destined to walk the earth desperately searching for our other half; yet rather, there really are people who come into our lives — some days fleetingly — to give us the equipment we need to prepare ourselves whole again.


Netflix / KC Bailey
"The search is wonderful, although we have to learn that it's not about them finding love," Wu says. "It's literally that search that causes us to reach for people. And as soon as you reach for people, you have a chance at growth. This movie is really about three people who collide, and as a result, each ends up learning something about themselves."


Wu and her friend lost touch right after high school. There were tears and heartache. Although the nights they spent talking about things a lot bigger than themselves — the universe and where they fit into it; computer science and probabilities; how to win over a girl — shaped her for years to come. And so they still influence her right now. The Half of It is her catharsis.


So, as Ellie gets on that train in the film's final scene, headed toward her future, a future that might not directly include Paul at all, it's bittersweet. Nevertheless that's just how Wu likes it.


"I habitually joke that I make the sort of comedy where I hope you cry at least once," she says. "If you haven't cried, then I failed."









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