I am always
impressed by artists who have the wisdom and feelings of experience when they’re
still too young to have accumulated it through living. It’s like that amazing Pink Floyd song, Time,
in which then 27 year old David Gilmore wrote “And then one day you find ten
years have got behind you. No one told you when to run, you missed the starting
gun.” The “Daniels" are like this. Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert, the 34-
and 35-year-old directors of Everything, Everywhere, All at Once,
seem to know what it’s like to be 60 year old Evelyn Wang (played majestically by
the wonderful Michelle Yeoh) an overwhelmed immigrant woman struggling to keep her
house and laundry in order, the taxes paid, and her relationships with her elderly
Chinese father, aching husband, and young gay daughter. She is coasting along in a culture that is still
foreign to her, feeling she’s drowning in a world that seems to be moving at an
impossible pace to keep up with.
Stephanie Hsu as Jobu Tupaki |
The cast the
Daniels direct to tell this multi-layered, multiverse story couldn’t be stronger or better. All Academy Award worthy!
Along side Michelle Yeoh is Stephanie Hsu who plays Joy Wang, Evelyn’s daughter.
She is the also much feared Jobu Tupaki in the other universes, threatening to
destroy everything through her pain. Ke Huy Quan is Waymond Wang, Evelyn’s sweet,
lovely, lonely and confused husband. Then there is the quite legendary actor James
Hong as Gong Gong, Evelyn’s father. Jamie Lee Curtis is unrecognizable as Deirdre
Beaubeirdre, transformed into the monstrous tax agent and most certainly a
woman we’ve met before in one immigration or tax office or another.
Ke Huy Quan, Michelle Yeoh, and James Hong |
The Daniel’s script is worthy of many awards for its creativity, its reach, but especially for the depth of feelings it captures. Jobu Tupaki, who carries the wrath of misunderstanding, of living in a world of parental expectations and disappointments, of hurt, says in her destruction of the universe, “If nothing matters, then all the pain and guilt you feel for making nothing of your life goes away.” Such depths of despair! Then along comes Waymond Wang, who wins the battle for us all with his formula for life, “The only thing I do know is that we have to be kind. Please, be kind. Especially when we don't know what's going on (…) You think because I’m kind that it means I'm naive, and maybe I am. It's strategic and necessary. This is how I fight.”
Indeed!This is how we
should all fight.