'Mulan' Director and Cast Break Down a Fight Scene
Released on 09/03/2020
This one never stopped, never asked to take a break,
never said she couldn't do anything.
At the end of that day it was just, it was clear
we'd found her, we had literally found Mulan
after over a year of searching everywhere
around the world.
Hi Vanity Fair, I'm Nicki Caro and I'm
the director of Disney's Mulan.
Hi, I'm Liu Yifei and I play Mulan.
Hi, my name's Yoson An, and I play Honghui.
[ALL] This is Notes On A Scene
Whoa
You're saying this like you've never seen the movie
This scene is the first time we see Mulan,
who is known as Hua Jun in this part of the movie,
fight with Honghui. Both of them are conscripts
in a training camp.
Right before this scene Mulan has to contend with
both being in disguise as a man, but mostly
not being able to show the strength she has.
In order to maintain her disguise,
she has to disguise all of herself.
And so we enter this scene with all the conscripts
gathered for a training session.
In terms of the movie, we are in the middle of China,
the vast country of China, but to shoot this scene
we were in New Zealand, in a beautiful place called
the Ahuriri Valley. It was also the location for
our epic battle scene once and a number of other
smaller scenes in the movie.
The first shot involves a very big crane shot.
It starts off in a high wide and you see all
the conscripts gathered below.
Then the crane descends and moves
along a track really fast, then has to
come to a sudden stop, and the crane
telescopes out into the action and
finds these two sparring.
[Yoson] Me picking a fight with Mulan
[Nicki] Yeah, you enjoying it very much,
all I remember from that shot
Yeah
Was the sound of all the guys
hanging off the crane trying to stop it
in time to telescope out between.
I think we rehearsed this scene for like
three months. You did a really good job with that.
Thank you, you too
Oh thanks
[Nicki] I mean a sequence like this is
a long time in the planning, it gets written first,
and then the stunt coordinator comes in and,
with two stand-ins, works out the action, and then
he brings it to me and I work on it as well,
editing it, and then we hand over to you guys
Yeah
So that you learn the particular moves,
and of course both of you had stunt doubles
Yeah
In this scene, but you do a lot of
your own work as well.
A sequence like this is made of so many
different shots, and its shot by two units
over a period of its either two or three days
Yes yes
I love this, now it's serious this is
a girl that hasn't wanted to put
a spotlight on herself in any way,
but now she is all emotion
Yeah
And she's burst and he, on the other hand,
having a brilliant time, which just
pisses her off.
We're going Yes! Bring it!
Yeah
To be honest, even though my character,
Honghui, was getting his ass beat,
I shouldn't say that, even though he was getting whooped
by Mulan, I feel like he was still
having a good time, until she was like
no I can't show too much.
Yeah, but as far as your character is concerned
here this is just another guy right?
Yeah yeah
A guy that he is forming a friendship with,
and enjoying being around and cared
and who actually has all of these crazy skills
that he hadn't shown anybody
Yeah just out of the blue
You did that right?
Yeah
Yifei, that's actually Yifei's strong
balletic background making it possible
for you to put your leg back but
Oh that wasn't that bad because
that wasn't all the way so
Right
And it's a kick so you don't have to like stay there
Yeah yeah yeah yeah
And this is where Mulan starts to lose control,
but we also see how much control she has over her body,
so emotionally she's losing control,
but physically she's showing everybody what she's got
and you can see
I like their reactions so cute!
And you can see these guys are
Let's draw little mustaches on those!
Oh no no no no oh Cricket
I'm gonna draw a little mustache on Cricket
We start to see by the reactions of the guys,
first of all they're laughing because
you're getting your ass kicked
Yep
But then they are kind of contending with
Hua Jun's power, and that's a little
confusing for some of them, particularly
the ones who aren't very bright.
When we prepare for a sequence like this,
it's not just preparing the choreography, but
preparing the bodies, and the minds,
and the stamina of the people that are
going to be doing the work.
So these two and the other guys who you see in the scene
were in physical training, intense physical training,
for three months.
Yes, or longer actually
Right, do you want to talk about that Yoson?
I think we, on top of stunt training,
which was maybe two to three hours a day
For you two to three hours? Not for me
Oh so you were better than him?
I was longer!
You were longer? Oh.
Sorry to interrupt please continue
We went through some other training, we did
strengthening conditioning on top of that,
which got us into that warrior spirit.
What you see here is really through our training.
Yeah, it means you guys can walk on to set
and be really well prepared, not just physically
and not just with your cog- with the choreography,
but critically emotionally prepared.
Yeah yeah yeah
They can drop in from the 21st Century
True
to Ancient China
This is actually a very complicated sequence to shoot,
because it requires two actors, two stunt doubles,
three cameras, pretty much three camera positions,
so we are looking this way of course, to Mulan,
we're looking this way to Honghui, and we're
we've got the camera kind of traveling
very quickly down the track behind these spears
which is this really kind of amazing
graphic and strobe-y image.
And it means it's possible for me to
use your stunt double, Yashei, in one of those shots,
and that is Yashei on camera, but because
we've got the strobing of the spears
in the front of the lens we totally get away with it.
When you're scheduling a scene like this,
as much as I would've liked to do all of it,
in the main unit, my schedule only
allows me to be shooting the actors, not the
stunt people so its almost like, sort of,
embroidery, trying to get all the shots correct
and have two units shooting the same size shot
with different performers in the same lighting conditions
over two days, which is really difficult
as we know in New Zealand,
because the weather changes so much.
Here we go, oh still enjoying yourself Yoson,
[Yoson] Yeah yeah
But not for too much longer.
This is an interesting move because this is where
you see male strength like get the spear in there
and just like kick the spear out of her hands,
and she's having none of it.
The rhythm is so good, the rhythm is telling the mood
And all of that is worked out like months before
we keep refining it and keep refining it,
so when we get on set and we've only got
a certain amount of hours to do our work,
that we're not going 'oh what if we did this
or what if we did this'
this movie was not made like that.
[Yoson] Look at how focused she is
She's yeah and you too my friend
I'm like 'what's she gonna throw at me next?'
[Nicki] Yeah so now it's very very intense between them,
and you can see from the reactions of our other guys here,
good, doing well, possibly,
not quite looking at the right place,
but it's okay
[Yoson] Is he looking at the camera?
He might be but points off, this one very good.
And a lot of those are stunt people,
they're our kung-fu masters, and then additionally
there are a bunch of extras.
In this scene there was about a hundred I think.
This movie is very costume driven.
Costume is incredibly important in this part of the movie
because we're talking about all the guys
coming to training camp and starting to learn
how to wear armor. This is your practice armor right?
This is it's a lot lighter than the actual armor.
There's the shoulder piece here,
and then there's a chest piece,
and then there's also the one that guards the quads,
but also
And then you've got the wrist guards
Oh yeah
This is connected to here this is connect
to here that's how they wrap it
Yeah
The first time we took 40 minutes to put it on,
the last time past it's getting faster but still
taking about an ho- half an hour
It takes a while but it looks really good
Yeah it looks good
And also you can't hear through remember this,
this takes a while too
And that's really, that was genius,
our costume designer, Bina Diageler,
came up with this idea because, of course,
all men in that time had really long hair,
therefore it went up in a top-knot,
to make wigs for the hundreds of people
we needed to make wigs for was,
it just wasn't a possibility,
so these head wraps became a part of the costume,
with a little like a little cup underneath.
It was like a straw cup to emulate the hair bun
I have a real one, yeah
You've got a real top-knot, and you guys had wigs
Yes
Underneath those but everybody else had the head wear.
Even though this movie is an action movie,
and the action's explosive and it's very raw,
and very visceral, it was also as important, to me,
to make a movie that was very beautiful.
Like, photographically, beautiful.
Along with the stunning landscapes,
we have a production design that has
both the incredibly and intensely colorful imperial city
when Mulan gets dressed for the match maker,
it's really gorgeous, but then, when Mulan goes to war
in the middle of the movie, we go into
this very sort of monochromatic environment,
and the predominant color there is red.
You can't see this so well here under the practice armor
but the tunic is red and it makes for really
kind of graphic, stylized images.
I love the red because I think it's
really in line with love, passion, and this strongness.
Everyone came from their respective villages, right,
and I think going into this world,
where everyone's dressed the same way,
dressed in the same red way, that brings a certain energy,
and as you both said it brings a certain passion,
in terms of bringing everyone together for the same mission.
It is all about making everybody look the same,
you know when you go into the army whatever army it is,
and the interesting thing is that in amongst
these thousands of men is this one young woman,
and she manages to disappear within them,
but is seen like this, where she shines a spotlight
on herself, exposes her to potentially being found out,
yet she can't be anything but true to herself
and her emotions you can really see this here.
A: what an amazing still here, amazing performance,
and a lot of this movie is shot on really long lenses,
and so you see Yifei in focus and everybody else,
who are quite close to her, out of focus behind her.
And we, this is a lens called a Pittsburgh lens,
our favorite lens
it really kind of radically softens the outside,
bringing all of your focus into the inside of the frame.
And most of the way we frame stuff was to frame
Mulan, Yifei, like right at the center,
so we would always use this lens on you,
and it, only in very very extraordinary circumstances
did we ever shoot anybody else with that lens
because it was all yours.
You know standing on the side, in front of the camera,
most of the time I couldn't actually see where
the camera was, because it was so far away,
because the lens was so far you know.
It's a good point Yoson, because being on the
longer lenses means the actors can perform
and feel very free
I remember that saying when I need to ride a horse
we would have a group of people ride a horse together
forward on that road on one road and
I'm like there's no camera!
Are we on a film set?
It's a 2800ml lens its about as big as you
CJ's there you know rolling
and then I see him eventually and he's like
'cause its a low low how do you say
low shot?
Low angle
Low angle yeah and its ahh there it is
We had two lenses built, one of which,
the other special one, a 58ml lens gouse lens,
which had a what you call a chromatic apparition
in it, which will distort the shot so there's
almost like little rainbows little flarey rainbows
in it and what we were trying to do was
express Mulan's chi her power,
and this lens did it for us.
So you see how much the, how much distortion is here,
how much softness here.
But the focus is really
I think this is the only shot right,
in this sequence, that was on a wire,
so that she could leap high and then
we pan back to your startled face.
And here you see Mulan as Hua Jun realize what she's done,
she's put a spotlight on herself.
With this movie we tried very hard to
keep off wires - a lot of martial arts movies
employ a lot of wire work but for us,
particularly for Mulan who's not a superhero,
we wanted to ground the action somewhat
in the laws of physics, and so for me it was like
the beauty of seeing a strong female body in action.
When you are on a harness, sometimes,
it feels like oh they're helping you right,
because they're controlling you,
but I feel like our method is I have to just do
the exact move, don't think about the wire,
and just to be you, so there is actually a part
of your body actually so that way I feel like
I can come to the balance better,
and knowing where and when to land,
and knowing which direction I'm going.
So the lines are up there right,
that's the one where it's wrapped right?
So one wire, and then they wrap it so that you spin?
So basically use this leg and do a little pull off,
and then its that kind of move.
Yeah and all the wire does is just get some elevation,
but the force, the explosive force of body,
is coming right through the hips.
And you also have ballet so, it meant, for me,
even though we had an amazing stunt double
for Yifei, often we would ask for Yifei,
rather than the stunt double because in her body
she has tremendous grace that goes with the strength,
and incredible extension. 'Cause what she would do
sometimes when we went off the choreography,
was more instinctive and more beautiful.
When we practiced real martial arts
you're trying to hit that person,
to take that other person down,
but here I learnt that you have to make sure
you don't hit the other person, at all.
Where I turned around, this part,
I struggled with this move so much,
I think I did it we shot it like five times,
I don't know something like that,
I finally got it on the sixth take,
and everybody clapped 'cause it was like
a big achievement for me just to get that move.
We had to make sure we worked together
on this particular scene because
the edge of my spear was on Yifei's wrist
and I didn't want to, you know
Oh right you don't want to, yeah
I didn't want, exactly yeah because
you know these are real weapons we're playing with so
Yeah, they did have rubber tips though,
just so everybody's
Yeah yeah yeah of course
I guess one of the big surprises, certainly for me,
was how easily I came to action sequences.
I really love them I love everything about them,
from the writing of them to the designing of them,
and the constant kind of refinement of them in
the planning stage. You know, there's a way
to shoot them where you just, which is how
action sequences which is just with a lot of coverage,
just coverage coverage coverage,
so you've always got that moment,
and then there's the way we approach them.
But what Mandy and I were doing with the camera
was really explosive.
In other sequences we are kind of turning the camera
180, 360 degrees in the middle of the shot,
we're tipping the frame up on it's side,
we're doing all kinds of joyous and expressive things
with the camera that just literally came out of
the sheer joy of being able to do it,
and being able to play with these big toys.
I had worked for Disney before, I made a movie
called McFarland USA, and they knew that I was
a stalking fan of Mulan,
so they let me in the door,
and it turned out that my vision for the live action
version of Mulan, which is a huge,
very real epic action adventure movie,
was exactly what they were hoping
a director would come through the door and provide.
Thanks very much Vanity Fair!
We hope you enjoy Mulan!
This has been Notes On A Scene
Starring: Niki Caro
Game of Thrones’ Director Breaks Down Ned Stark’s Final Scene
Animal Trainer Breaks Down Dog Acting in Movies
Jon Favreau Breaks Down The Lion King's Opening Scene
Leonardo DiCaprio & Quentin Tarantino Break Down Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’s Main Character
Disney Animation Designer Breaks Down Cinderella's Dress Transformation
"The Farewell" Director Breaks Down the Movie’s Script
Hollywood Stuntwoman Breaks Down Her Career in Stunts
Hollywood Stuntwoman Breaks Down Her Career in Stunts
Renée Zellweger and Rupert Goold Break Down a Scene from "Judy"
Mean Girls Costume Designer Breaks Down Lindsay Lohan's Costumes
Ad Astra Filmmakers Break Down the Lunar Scenes
Joker Director Breaks Down the Opening Scene
Kevin Smith Breaks Down a Scene from Jay and Silent Bob Reboot
"Maleficent: Mistress of Evil" Director Breaks Down the Dinner Scene
The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance Creators Break Down the Carriage Chase Scene
Taika Waititi and Stephen Merchant Break Down a Scene from 'Jojo Rabbit'
'Terminator: Dark Fate' Director Breaks Down a Car Chase
'Parasite' Director Bong Joon-ho Breaks Down the Opening Scene
Elizabeth Banks Breaks Down a Scene from 'Charlie's Angels'
‘Rocketman’ Director Breaks Down a Scene with Taron Egerton
Saoirse Ronan, Timothée Chalamet, Laura Dern & Greta Gerwig Break Down a Scene from 'Little Women'
‘The Irishman’ Costume Designers Break Down Dressing 5 Decades of Crime
Matthew McConaughey, Guy Ritchie & Cast of 'The Gentlemen' Break Down a Scene
Noah Baumbach Breaks Down the ‘Marriage Story’ Courtroom Scene
Forrest Gump’s Production Designer Breaks Down Lt. Dan’s First Scene
Choreographers Break Down a Mary Poppins Dance Scene
Fast Five's Stunt Coordinator Breaks Down the Vault Car Chase Scene
Craig Ferguson Teaches Scottish Slang to Jay Baruchel
Captain Marvel's Directors Break Down the Train Fight Scene
Tim Burton Breaks Down Dumbo's Parade Scene With Colleen Atwood
Issa Rae & Director Stella Meghie Break Down the First Date Scene in ‘The Photograph'
Director Rian Johnson Breaks Down a Scene from 'Knives Out'
Justin Timberlake Breaks Down the 'Trolls World Tour' Soundtrack (ft. Ludwig Göransson)
'Mulan' Director and Cast Break Down a Fight Scene
Black Panther's Costume Designer Breaks Down T'Challa's Entrance Scene
Sacha Baron Cohen Breaks Down 'The Trial of the Chicago 7' with Aaron Sorkin
Zack Snyder Breaks Down a Zombie Heist Scene from 'Army of the Dead'
John Krasinski Breaks Down the Opening Scene from 'A Quiet Place Part II'
Paul Feig Breaks Down 'Bridesmaids' Airplane Scene After 10 Year Anniversary
Hugh Grant Breaks Down a Scene from 'The Undoing' with Director Susanne Bier
M. Night Shyamalan Breaks Down The First Jump Scare From 'Old'
Matt Damon and Director Tom McCarthy Break Down a Scene from 'Stillwater'
Dove Cameron Breaks Down the Picnic Scene from Schmigadoon! with Cinco Paul
'The Green Knight' Director Breaks Down the Green Knight's Introduction Scene
Sean Penn & Dylan Penn Break Down Their Scene Together in 'Flag Day'
'Shang-Chi' Director Destin Daniel Cretton Breaks Down the Bus Fight Scene
Andy Serkis Breaks Down a Fight Scene from 'Venom: Let There Be Carnage'
'Dune' Director Denis Villeneuve Breaks Down the Gom Jabbar Scene
Tessa Thompson & Rebecca Hall Break Down the Dance Scene from 'Passing'
Edgar Wright Breaks Down Scenes from 'Shaun of the Dead,' 'Last Night in Soho' & More
Andrew Garfield & Lin-Manuel Miranda Break Down 'tick, tick...Boom!'s' Party Scene
Squid Game Director & Cast Break Down The Red Light/Green Light Scene
Maggie Gyllenhaal and Dakota Johnson Break Down a Scene from 'The Lost Daughter'
Roland Emmerich Breaks Down Scenes from Independence Day, Moonfall & More
Disney's 'Encanto' Creators Break Down the Gift Ceremony Scene
'Everything Everywhere All at Once' Directors & Michelle Yeoh Break Down a Fight Scene
Judd Apatow Breaks Down Scenes from His Movies
Alexander Skarsgård & 'The Northman' Director Break Down Amleth's Return as a Viking
Viggo Mortensen, Léa Seydoux & David Cronenberg Break Down 'Crimes Of The Future' Surgery Scene
Taika Waititi and Tessa Thompson Break Down 'Thor: Love and Thunder' "Taste The Rainbow" Scene
The Russo Brothers Break Down Scenes from Their Movies
John Krasinski Breaks Down A Quiet Place's Lantern Scene
Andy Serkis Shows How He Captured Christian Bale's Animal Instincts in Mowgli
Tommy Wiseau Breaks Down a Scene in "The Disaster Artist"
Thor: Ragnarok's Director Breaks Down a Fight Scene
Infinity War's Directors Break Down the Thor and Guardians of the Galaxy Scene
Black Panther's Director Ryan Coogler Breaks Down a Fight Scene
Sacha Baron Cohen Breaks Down 'Borat Subsequent Moviefilm's' Cake Scene
Atlanta's Director Hiro Murai Breaks Down "Teddy Perkins"
Ant-Man and the Wasp's Director Breaks Down the Kitchen Fight Scene
Crazy Rich Asians' Director Breaks Down the Mansion Scene
I, Tonya's Choreographer Breaks Down the Triple Axel Scene
Grease's Director Breaks Down the "You're The One That I Want" Scene
La La Land's Choreographer Explains the Freeway Dance Scene
Venom's Director Breaks Down a Fight Scene
Aquaman’s Director Breaks Down Jason Momoa's Fight Scene
The Handmaid's Tale Director Breaks Down the Funeral Scene
The Crown's Costume Designer Breaks Down the Fashion of Season 2
John Wick 2's Stunt Coordinator Breaks Down the Opening Car Chase
Skyscraper’s Director Breaks Down an Action Scene with Dwayne Johnson
Westworld's Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy Break Down Season 2, Episode 4
Melissa McCarthy and Ben Falcone Break Down a Scene from Life of the Party
Sofia Coppola Breaks Down the Dinner Scene from "The Beguiled"
Ben Stiller Breaks Down a Prison Yard Scene from “Escape at Dannemora”
Homeland's Director Breaks Down the Season 7 Finale Episode
Stranger Things' VFX Team Explains Season 2's Visual Effects
VFX Breakdown Of “War for the Planet of the Apes” With Its Director
The Girl in the Spider's Web Director Breaks Down a Fight Scene
Miriam Shor Breaks Down Younger Season 5, Episode 5
Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom’s Director Breaks Down the Volcanic Eruption Scene
Darkest Hour's Director, Joe Wright Breaks Down A Scene with Gary Oldman as Winston Churchill
'Colette' Director Breaks Down the Big Entrance Scene | Notes on a Scene
Blockers' Puke Scene Explained By the Director
Hotel Artemis' Director Breaks Down Jodie Foster's Opening Scene
Superfly's Director X Breaks Down the Movie's Gambling Scene
Ron Howard Breaks Down a Cave Diving Scene from 'Thirteen Lives'
Olivia Wilde Breaks Down 'Don't Worry Darling' Dinner Party Scene
Stranger Things Composers Break Down the Show's Music
Zac Efron & Peter Farrelly Break Down A War Scene From 'The Greatest Beer Run Ever'
David O. Russell Breaks Down a Scene from 'Amsterdam'
'Triangle of Sadness' Director Breaks Down a Dinner Date Scene
Timothée Chalamet & Taylor Russell Break Down a Scene from 'Bones and All' with Luca Guadagnino
Anya Taylor-Joy & Nicholas Hoult Break Down 'The Menu' Scene with Director Mark Mylod
Hugh Jackman & Laura Dern Break Down 'The Son' Scene with Director Florian Zeller
Olivia Colman & Micheal Ward Break Down 'Empire of Light' Scene with Director Sam Mendes
Director Rian Johnson Breaks Down the Arrival Scene from 'Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery'
Sadie Sink & Darren Aronofsky Break Down 'The Whale' Scene
'RRR' Director Breaks Down the Oscar-Winning Naatu Naatu Scene
'Puss in Boots' Director & Harvey Guillén Break Down the Wagon Scene
Succession Director Mark Mylod Breaks Down That Scene From Connor's Wedding
Chad Stahelski Breaks Down 'John Wick: Chapter 4' Fight Scenes
Park Chan-wook Breaks Down 'Oldboy' Corridor Fight Scene
Jacob Elordi & Cailee Spaeny Break Down 'Priscilla' Scene with Director Sofia Coppola
'Nyad' Directors Break Down Historic Cuba to Florida Swim Scene
Taika Waititi Breaks Down Mountain Climb Scene from 'Next Goal Wins'
'Saltburn' Director Emerald Fennel Breaks Down the Arrival Scene
Hunger Games Director Breaks Down Scenes from 'Mockingjay,' 'Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes' and More
Adam Driver & Michael Mann Break Down Fight Scene from 'Ferrari'
Emma Stone, Mark Ruffalo & Director Yorgos Lanthimos Break Down 'Poor Things' Scenes
Zac Efron, Jeremy Allen White, Harris Dickinson & Director Sean Durkin Break Down 'Iron Claw' Scenes
Leonardo DiCaprio & Lily Gladstone Break Down 'Killers of the Flower Moon' Table Scene
'Dune: Part Two' Director Denis Villeneuve Breaks Down the Sandworm Scene
Ryan Gosling, Emily Blunt & David Leitch Break Down 'The Fall Guy' Stunt Scene
Austin Butler & Jodie Comer Break Down a Scene From 'The Bikeriders'
MaXXXine's Mia Goth & Director Ti West Break Down a Scene
Colman Domingo & Director Greg Kwedar Break Down a Scene From 'Sing Sing'
Anora's Mikey Madison & Director Sean Baker Break Down a Scene
Malcolm & John David Washington Break Down a Scene From 'The Piano Lesson'
'Wicked' Director & Cinematographer Break Down the 'Dancing Through Life' Scene
Nicholas Hoult & Director Robert Eggers Break Down a Scene From 'Nosferatu'