Originally, to honor his immigrant parents, Bao Nguyen thought he was going to become a lawyer. As a small child, he worked in his father’s shop behind the register, where he spent his time between customers sketching and drawing what he now sees as storyboards.
Working as a Director and Cinematographer since 2009, Nguyen worked on projects like ‘We Gon’ Be Alright’ and ‘Live from New York!’ before tackling his largest project to date, a documentary about the personal life of icon Bruce Lee.
The official description reads, “Rejected by Hollywood, Bruce Lee returned to Hong Kong to complete four films. Charting his struggles in two worlds, ‘Be Water’ explores questions of identity and representation through rare archive, intimate interviews, and his writings.”
In this interview, Nguyen talks about his father’s secret dream to become an architect, why he avoided “talking heads” for the film, why documentarians should seek humility, how to account for every frame in a doc, and how we went about humanizing Bruce Lee.
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