Above: Official character poster of Zan in Wu Assassins (C) 2019 Netflix. Used for promotional purposes only, as are all of the photos contained in this interview.
Greetings
valued Dan's Movie Report and www.action-flix.com
readers
On August 8th
Netflix unleashed a brand new show called Wu Assassins. In the few
weeks the show has been out it has rocketed to the top ten on IMDB,
and has a high Rotten Tomatoes score. An instant binge watch for me
in one day lead to a detailed review, but I wanted to get a small
slice of behind the scenes. I have known and covered JuJu Chan on my
site for over five years and I have always found her to be quite
interesting to talk with, engaging, forthcoming, and brutally honest.
2019 is a big year for JuJu as three of her projects are released,
and her star, as I predicted is rising to the top. Hollow Point is
already released in the U.K., Invincible Dragon, released in China
July 2nd,
comes out on DVD in China August 30th,
but since those projects are not completely ready for the U.S. Film
market, this is a Wu Assassins specific interview. In addition, JuJu
was able to work with one of the most creative directors Roel in two
episodes, and I wanted to get her perspective on shooting with him.
Sit back, relax, unleash the power of the baddest villain in Wu
Assassins, Zan! A spiked heel textual ass kicking will now commence
haha!
Chat
about your initial meetings with the producers of Wu Assassins, was
this a role you auditioned for or was the part written for you.
I
went in for two castings for Wu Assassins for the role of Ying Ying.
First time was with the casting director. Second was for John Wirth,
the show runner. After the second casting I got a call the same
week (can't remember if it was the next day or the day after)
saying they wanted me for a different role. It was only later that
I found out that they created a role for me.
Chat
about working with Iko and his team, and also Stunts Canada, what
are some of the new elements in your action game you learned for the
show, and maybe some tips and tricks in general.
Working
with the Uwais Stunt Team was like a dream come true. I would
constantly grab any of the stuntmen (who are all masters of Silat)
to teach me different things every time I saw any of them
sitting around. I think they started dreading me when I turned up in
the stunt room! LOL Needless to say I learned a lot of Silat
from them all.
What
really surprised me was the very high standard of the Canadian fight
team. The entire team was so professional, and yes, I would work
with them too as much as possible to learn from them! From them I
learn a lot of BJJ and Filipino knife work, which fight
choreographer Dan Rizzuto is fantastic at. He's a BJJ black belt and
trained years in FMA with some of the top masters. He was also
a professional MMA fighter, so he brought a lot to the table.
Incredible,
yes Stunts Canada is top notch, working on shows such as Arrow, and
The 100! Yes you are active and challenge people to be their best! I
must say interviewing you make me a netter writer hah! With regards
to the episodes in Wu Assassins, was each episode shot linearly, and
what was the time allotment for each episode, approximately. Did you
have more time to work out the action sequences? Maybe describe a
typical week on set.
It's
about 7 working days per episode, give or take. Depending on how
much screen time my character was given in each episode would
determine my schedule. As you can see from the series, Zan didn't
appear much in the early episodes. Over that time I worked a
lot with the stunt team, letting Dan gauge how he can shape
my character's fight style. It was during that time that
we filmed the pre-vis for the kitchen fight (and later the
other fights). Because I did my own pre-vis for the series
I was totally familiar with the fights when it came to
actually shooting them on the day, which was great for
production because they could only give us sometimes only a couple
of hours to shoot an entire complex fight scene. Kudos to
Megan Hui, who worked so hard with me to pull off some fantastic
fights. And it should be noted that Li Jin Li worked very hard
too on her fight scenes so we were able to see a lot of her during
the fights.
Above: JuJu Chan fight Highlights from Wu Assassins
Very
cool way of shooting things, JuJu you are an amazing action person!
Doing your own pre-vis is the way to do it! Quite interesting on Wu
Assassins is the use of several different directors, each bringing
their own unique flair on the project, maybe go into some of their
styles and how you approached your character each time.
Above: Exclusive shot of JuJu Chan with Episode 3 director Roel (C) 2019 Netflix used for promotional purposes only
Above: A spiked heel in Episode 8 drives the point home! (C) 2019 Netflix Used for promotional purposes only
You
have a scintillating action sequence in episode 3, I am curious how
long that took to film and the experience working with action woman
Megan Hui. This gave me joy chat as well working with Roel, I feel
he brings a lot to the table with regards to action and camera work.
I
mentioned above about the pre-vis, so we went into the kitchen fight
pretty much knowing exactly what had to be done. Roel held the
camera himself, and him being super familiar with action, allowed
everything to move smoothly and efficiently. I think we shot that
very complicated fight in 3 or 4 hours, which is crazy quick.
Yes
Roel shoots very fast, the entire Hard Target 2 film with Scott
Adkins was shot in under 20 days. On your character Zan, what
personality traits did you give her, beyond the scripted work,
seemed like you made her extra devious.
The
scripts are quite detailed on what the characters do and should be
conveying to the audience in terms of feelings. Other than that we
were given complete freedom to build our character backgrounds.
Being brought up in Hong Kong I decided to give Zan a tough
street smart persona learn from being brought up in a tough
neighborhood in Hong Kong. I've met a lot of people like that when I
used to go to these areas to teach piano
to underprivileged children. There's a toughness to the
people there, men and women alike. But there is also a great
value placed on loyalty. I wanted Zan to convey that.
You
always help others, it is cool you were able to bring that into your
character. I figured that regarding the scripts, it shows. That
said, Zan is a a bad girl fans can root for! Finally, I must say the
ADR in Wu was very clear, were their additional ADR sessions?
Yes.
I actually had mine done in Hong Kong while the producers were in LA
directing me. Gotta love the internet!
Thanks
JuJu for this amazing interview, I look forward to working with you
on doing a new one closer to the United States releases of Hollow
Point, and Invincible Dragon. Watch for more Wu Assassins exclusives
and other cool stuff from JuJu Chan in the coming months. For
additional information on JuJu point your browsers to her official
social media pages. JuJu is very active, and the entire cast are
tweeting and promoting Wu Assassins on a regular basis!
Her latest Reel:
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/jujuchan/
Instagram:
https://www.instagram.com/jujuchanhk/?hl=en
Twitter:
https://twitter.com/JuJu_Chan
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