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The Best Director

Tác giả: Wallee The Robot
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  • 4.3
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Tóm tắt

Wang Yang never stopped pursuing his dream of becoming a director and making movies that could amaze the world. However, the fate seemed to play a malicious joke on him. He got wrongly accused and expelled from USC. Fortunately, when God closed a door to Wang Yang, he opened a window for him. After a baby stroller hit him on the street, he began to be able to watch the movies from the future in his head! Since then, the year of 1988 was destined to be an extraordinary year. Besides the miracle written by “Titanic”, one of the most legendary directors in the 21st century was rising quietly…

Chapter 1Chapter 1: The Student Expelled from the University of Southern California

"Don't worry, I'm doing fine. Please, Mom, you know as well as I do that the weather in Los Angeles is almost the same as in San Francisco, how could I possibly be cold?" Wang Yang held the receiver, leaning against the phone booth, looking out at the campus scenery while pretending to be excitedly laughing, "Just a few days ago, I saw Robert Zemeckis. Yes! The director of 'Forrest Gump.' He's an alumnus of the University of Southern California and was invited by our president to give a lecture. It was amazing, that day I talked to him for a long time, oh, he's very approachable, really a nice guy..."

It was April, and the weather in Los Angeles was warm and pleasant, gradually leaving the cold winter rains behind to step into the hot summer. The lawn of the USC School of Cinematic Arts was a lush green, with young students scattered about lying on the grass, either reading or chatting, and some fiddling with DV cameras—a vibrant and upward scene.

"Hm, I've got to go help out on a set in a bit... ah, speak of the devil, my classmate is calling me to head out, gotta hang up, bye!"

As soon as he hung up the receiver, Wang Yang let out a long sigh of relief, his face immediately shifting from joy to dejection, watching the leisurely students on the lawn, he couldn't help but scratch his head in annoyance, and mutter a defeated curse: "Shit!"

He tightened the trench coat around him, picked up a cardboard box filled with assorted items from the ground, and walked step by step toward the exit of the school, occasionally looking back longingly at the beautiful surroundings. USC School of Cinematic Arts was supposed to be the place where his dreams took flight, but now, all was ruined.

Wang Yang was a Chinese American; his grandfather had immigrated to America and started a Chinese restaurant in San Francisco's Chinatown. The restaurant had been passed down to his father and had remained in business until today. However, despite the efforts of two generations, the "family business" had not grown but rather had become even more run-down, barely getting by on the business of neighbors and acquaintances, having been on the brink of closure for many years.

Although Wang Yang had grown up in the restaurant, he had no interest in cooking; he was incredibly passionate about movies instead. At the age of nine, after watching 'Cinema Paradiso,' he was determined to be a director! Well, back then, he thought being a projectionist like old man Alfredo was the same as being a director.

In any case, from that point on, he had been moving towards that goal, and he had succeeded—he entered the University of Southern California's School of Cinematic Arts at 18, majoring in film and television production. Everything was moving in a positive direction until that incident happened.

It had happened a week ago, and then he was expelled, during his second semester as a freshman, expelled.

Thinking about the causes and consequences, Wang Yang sighed helplessly, his head throbbing with frustration. Originally, after completing his bachelor's at USC, he could have gone on to pursue a master's degree or found work as an assistant director to gain experience while waiting for the opportunity to become a director. But with his expulsion, the dream of becoming a director was slipping further away.

"Hey, isn't that our Chinese guy (Chink)? Where are you rushing off to?" A group of young people walked over from the lawn, four boys and two girls, with all but one of the boys being white, the other being black. The blond white guy in front, laughing with a smile, imitated a monkey's dance while making strange noises: "Ping-pang, Ping-pang? Ching-chong, Ching-chong?"

Following his strange noises, the rest of the group burst into laughter, their faces full of mockery and disdain, looking down on Wang Yang.

Even though Wang Yang was American, this was far from the first time he had heard such words. He loved his yellow skin and black eyes, he loved Chinese characters, loved Chinese food, and cherished Chinese culture; he had never discriminated against anyone and deeply despised racial prejudice. Yet, the reason he was expelled was rooted in racial discrimination.

It was all a miscarriage of justice. One day, facing the same situation as now, he was insulted and provoked by a black classmate, who even cursed his mother. Unable to tolerate any more, he lost control of his emotions and in a rage he hit the person.

The black classmate's name was Terrence Ben, a burly figure, yet Wang Yang had learned Bajiquan since he was a child from a master in Chinatown. Although not a martial arts expert, handling a brute like Terrence was no problem. As he knocked Terrence down, Wang Yang cursed, "Is this what you wanted? Fuck!"

Unfortunately, that "Fuck you!" was overheard by a teacher who came at the sound of the commotion, and that teacher was a black man, Gary Martin.

Afterwards, Terrence Ben accused him first, twisting the story, insisting that Wang Yang had verbally abused him and then added insult to injury with his fists. Although Wang Yang tried desperately to explain his side, there were no bystanders on the lawn at the time to testify for him; however, Terrence Ben had black teacher Gary Martin to vouch for him, leading the school authorities to believe Terrence's account over Wang Yang's, and Wang Yang was expelled.

Ironically, now he faced people encircling him with "racial discrimination," yet no one stood up for justice on his behalf.

"Hey, Bruce Lee, what do you want, a banana? Oh, have some!" A blonde named Matthew performed a few pelvic-thrusting gestures, teasing, "Come on, I know what you like!"

The other five young people laughed out loud as well. They all knew about Wang Yang's expulsion and so took the opportunity to ridicule him. It wasn't that Wang Yang had wronged them; it was merely his Asian identity that made him a target of entertainment for these idle folks.

Call a black person "N-Word," and it goes to court as racial discrimination; but call an Asian "Chink" or "Chinaman," and it's seldom seen as such. This is the other side of this highly democratic, equality-advocating country.

"OK, you've angered me." Wang Yang slowly put down the cardboard box and suddenly stepped forward, grabbing the smirking Matthew by the collar, "You have two choices, apologize or I send you to the hospital."

"Oh, Chinese boy, you want to hit me?" Matthew's freckled face flashed with a hint of panic, but he feigned calmness, "If you want to go to jail, go ahead and make your move."

Wang Yang laughed, his tone neither angered nor flustered, "If you want to become a priest, I can kick your 'eggs' to kingdom come."

Remembering how Terrence Ben, with his quarterback build, ended up looking like a swine's head at the hands of Wang Yang before him, Matthew couldn't help but swallow hard. The three men and two women next to him also grew tense, starting to chant "Hey, calm down, calm down," but after Wang Yang glanced at them from the corner of his eye, they quieted a bit, worried that they might get beaten too.

"All right, you can focus on serving God now." Wang Yang's expression changed, and before he had finished speaking, he tugged hard with one hand while feigning a kick with his right leg.

Matthew was startled and yelled, "Wait, wait!" He struggled vigorously while shouting, "I apologize, I apologize! My fault, my fault!"

Oh! Along with Matthew's five accomplices, the new onlookers all slapped their foreheads, expressing dissatisfaction with Matthew's apology by saying "COME ON".

"Are you an asshole?" Wang Yang's voice remained calm, but the murderous look in his eyes quashed any thoughts Matthew had of resisting. Matthew wanted to end it quickly and nodded, "Um, I am, I am..." Wang Yang asked, "You are what?" Deflated, Matthew said, "Asshole..."

Boos erupted all around, Matthews's companions rolled their eyes, and a few blonde women whispered and snickered, causing Matthew to feel a moment of humiliation and his face turned red.

Wang Yang smiled slightly and gently patted Matthew's cheek, saying, "Babe, you want to kill me? Bring a gun!" With that, he pushed Matthew with force, and Matthew staggered and stumbled backward.

Amidst a chorus of jeers, Wang Yang picked up the cardboard box from the ground and walked towards the campus exit. As he was about to leave the campus, he stopped and looked back at the school he had long admired and was now leaving with sadness, "Goodbye, old towering trees; goodbye, soft green lawns..." He took a deep breath and strode forward.

Where to go? Wang Yang, holding the cardboard box, wandered aimlessly on the streets of Los Angeles. Traffic was flowing on the roads, people were moving about, and the sound of traffic lights "dinging" kept ringing. Wang Yang stood at the intersection, lost, not knowing where to go.

The news of his expulsion from school had been kept a secret from his parents through great effort, for he was certain he would be forced to go back to San Francisco and, then, take over the "family business," becoming the third-generation chef of the restaurant.

"Dealing with groceries all day? No way!" Wang Yang shook his head and shouted in his heart, "All of my efforts and dreams over the years have been to become an outstanding director, to make great movies. And now, because of a false accusation, I should go back and look after a failing restaurant?!"

He recalled the ecstasy of being admitted to the University of Southern California, the congratulations and envious looks of his friends, the caring and expectant gaze of his parents who wanted to encourage him yet feared pressuring him, and that phrase, "Son, if you can't make it in Los Angeles, come back to San Francisco, the spoon in the restaurant is waiting for you to take over..."

Oh God, just thinking of going back and hearing his parents say, "Son, I knew you couldn't make movies, you might as well stay in the restaurant and cook," was enough for Wang Yang to scream out loud—it'd be better to be hit by a car and killed!

Shit! Wang Yang laughed at himself, "Although I love to eat Chinese food, I don't want to be a chef!" I refuse to go back in disgrace, to be teased by friends and receive disappointing consolation from my parents! I won't give up!

Just as Wang Yang was encouraging himself, walking halfway across the street, a woman pushing a baby carriage suddenly lost her grip, and the carriage uncontrollably crashed into his backside with a bang. Caught off guard, Wang Yang was knocked forward, the cardboard box flying from his hand, scattering its contents everywhere.

"Oh! God!" The onlookers covered their mouths in shock as the unbuckled baby bounced out of the carriage and flew through the air!

With a thud, Wang Yang hit the ground hard; another thud, and the baby landed right on his head, safe and sound.

So dizzy... Wang Yang could only feel a wave of dizziness and his vision blurred with illusions, not even knowing what had hit him, his mind filled with just one thought—am I going to die?

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Omnipotent Husband System

Hao Ren was born in another world and has lived for over twenty-two years being nothing but a definition of the word, average. After a high school reunion, the young man sat down on the beach shore, and mumbled to the sky, "God of Novels, you are unfair. I spent forty years of my life doing nothing but reading books and stories written by others. I worked hard to manifest this rebirth, and yet you did not bless me with anything. Why?" A voice echoed in his mind, "Host, you have the Omnipotent Husband System." Hao Ren scoffed and scolded the system, "What is the use of having you when you are not even active? Are you shitting with me, you bastard?!" The system replied, "Host the condition for activating the system is to get married." Hao Ren could not handle it anymore and cried out loud as he complained about this condition. He was not good-looking, and neither was he wealthy, who was going to marry him? Tired, he spent the on the beach. When he was returning home, he passed by the marriage registering center. He sighed for his fate but suddenly, a beautiful lady asked him, "Hey, do you have any identity card on you?" Hao Ren nodded in a daze, and the lady dragged him inside the office. The young man was yet to register what happened to him when an automated voice sounded, "Host, congratulations on getting married. Omnipotent Husband System is now activated." ... Years later, Hao Ren became an entity many people wished to meet. However, Hao Ren never stayed outside, to everything he had one reply, "I have to go home and cook for my wife." Would you like to know his journey from an average to an over-achieving person standing at the apex of power and prestige? ... Author's Note: If you guys wish to discuss the book with your co-readers, or have suggestions for me on how to improve the story, you can reach me out on discord. Discord: chasing_dream06

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Alanray64
Alanray64Lv15

Well this novel is an interesting read. It is nicely translated though I have come across a number of issues that I can only put down to laziness in not rechecking the work. Story begins with the author (studying to be a movie director) being expelled from his University on charges of racism. Amusingly the MC is Chinese and the accuser was African-American. Anyhow the charges are false but of course it’s a case of he said, she said and so he is booted. Whilst wallowing in misery he gains the ability to see movies from the future after being hit in the head by a baby stroller. So that’s is his super power, knowing future movies and being able to plagiarise them. No system, no special powers. The book itself reads well and has a nice story but that is it. I have nothing else to praise it over. The narrative is smooth but there is no grab to it. How many times can the MC direct a movie, produce a movie, invest in XYZ affiliated movie industry? I read up to about chapter 150 and even though I did enjoy reading the story, there was nothing to keep me invested in this. I appreciate the effort the author took to try and keep accuracy in his story however it again it felt like rinse and repeat of previous achievements. I really wanted to be invested in this and did give it a decent go, but it wasn’t to be. The author has decent skills so maybe he could have done this in another manner to keep readers involved. I did note some comments were 4 years old with only 251 chapters released. I suspect this was a trial read that never made the cut back then and WebNovel has pulled it out of the cupboard to see if it can make them some money. Overall it felt good but sadly I had to give up.

Someone_Or_Other
Someone_Or_OtherLv15

(Long review incoming) Up front caveat: The translation quality should actually get 2 stars, not 5, but overall this is a 5/5 novel for me because it makes up for the mistranslations in other ways. For a novel with so many flaws, this is a gem. I’ve been binge reading Hollywood novels lately and can say with a fair amount of certainty that this one is the best. The first one I read was “I am Hollywood”, which was also excellent, but it had two flaws that put it below this one: First, it was a dropped novel. I can’t stand it when a novel I enjoy reading is suddenly dropped by an author or translator. And second, it lost focus on being a “Hollywood Novel” (capital H capital N) and meandered about in the world of investing and corporate bullshit. The Best Director, on the other hand, remains true to its purpose, chronicling the life of the MC from the moment he gets his chest up until the very end. An end, might I add, that came too soon; I’d have liked this novel to be at least twice the length it is. Three times as long to account for the skippable chapters that add nothing to the plot or story. Which leads me to my first major complaint - filler content. I edit translated Chinese webnovels for a living, and as part of my job I’m exposed to all manner of methods WebNovel authors use to pad their word count. See, Qidian (and other webnovel publishers like 17k and Zongheng) pays authors a per-word rate. So authors have found many ways to increase word count, like in-chapter repetition, peanut galleries, long, drawn-out navelgazing bullshit, and so on. This novel has a particularly terrible method of padding its word count creep in about a third of the way through it: box office reports and critic reviews. Seriously, it gets to the point later in the novel where entire chapters are just dry lists of what movies made how much money that week. Out of the 500-odd chapters total, I’d say around 200 of them are skippable because the numbers aren’t even for the MC’s movies. And another hundred chapters or so have box office reports and critic reviews take up half the chapter without any warning whatsoever. It’ll skip directly from dialogue to box office and/or reviews without warning or any kind of transition whatsoever. It’s kinda bad like that. And the second major flaw is that the translator gets the names wrong. There’s a lot of inconsistency in names (Kevin Spacey and Kiefer Sutherland show up a lot, and Keira Knightley is referred to as Natalie every time she shows up), but what’s worse is that the translator didn’t bother looking up the correct American names of quite a few of the films mentioned. He or she also misses the times when the name of the movies change, like The Departed becoming The Deceased out of nowhere. As a translator, you can screw up anything *but* names. Names are the only thing that you must keep 100% accuracy and consistency on. So why did I rate this 5/5 despite those two massive flaws? Simple: character development. One of the things that almost no webnovel ever does is develop a character, much less the main characters. A common mistake they make is thinking that increasing strength (bigger numbers/Xianxia maths) is the same thing as character development. Spoiler: it is not. But in The Best Director, the entire main cast of characters grows and evolves, becoming better actors, better people, or just… better. It comes at the cost of removing conflict from the novel entirely, but the tradeoff is beyond worth it. It makes up for the cardinal sin of inconsistent names, it makes up for the virtually 300ish chapters you can either skim or skip entirely, it makes up for all of the other minor flaws that were so tiny I didn’t even bother remembering them. But wait! There’s more! The novel also actually has a proper ending. I may have wanted some of the storylines to continue (like how the MC had a whole big scene about buying the rights to adapt a certain major bestselling series, but the novel ended before he got around to doing just that), but the ending was really good. The author took their time to bring things to a proper close and it was very poignant at that. Those two virtues covereth a multitude of sins. So my advice is to read this novel. You won’t regret it.

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