2005–2007: Beginnings Filmmaking found itself early in Wang's career, but instead of movie theaters her content was exhibited in courtrooms. Shown for mediation and court cases, she created short “day in the life” videos for legal firms for her startup business, capturing injured victims’ daily struggles in mundane activities. She interviewed many clients and their families in an attempt to show the extent of their injuries. In 2005, while still a student, Wang received the Best Beginning Film Award at the Boston College Baldwin Awards for
Storyteller, which she made together with fellow Boston College student Tony Hale. They went on to win the Baldwin Award for Best Picture for the short film
Pisces at the Boston College Baldwin Film Festival the following year. Wang and Hale also collaborated on the 2006 documentary short,
Fishing the Gulf, on over-fishing in
Panama. Her next project was the 2007 short film
Can-Can, based on a short story by
Arturo Vivante about marriage and infidelity. Wang and Bürgi set up their own production company Flying Box Productions; Wang directed multiple web shorts and music videos and, in 2014, her first feature film,
Posthumous. Set in
Berlin, Germany,
Posthumous is an American-German co-production starring
Brit Marling and
Jack Huston. Wang was so dedicated to having Huston in the film, she wrote a heartfelt letter to him, which he later admitted was the reason he signed on to the first-time writer/director's project. The film debuted at the
Zurich Film Festival on 4 October 2014, played in the U.S. at the
Miami International Film Festival, and has been released worldwide. in 2015 In 2014, Wang was awarded the
Chaz and
Roger Ebert Directing Fellowship at the
Film Independent Spirit Awards. The same year, she was chosen as a Film Independent Project Involve Directing Fellow. Wang's 2015 short film
Touch premiered at the
Palm Springs International ShortFest.
Touch was an NBCU Short Film Festival finalist, was selected by the
American Cinematheque for its Annual Focus on Female Directors, and won Best Drama at the Asians on Film Festival.
2016–present: The Farewell and acclaim In May 2016, Wang wrote and narrated a story, "What You Don't Know", for the radio program
This American Life. Later that year, development began on a feature film based on the story with producer
Chris Weitz, who had heard it on the radio. In 2017, Wang was chosen to participate in
Sundance Institute’s
FilmTwo Initiative, which provides guidance for filmmakers creating their second feature films. In January 2019, Wang's second feature film,
The Farewell, premiered at the
Sundance Film Festival, where it was picked up for worldwide distribution by
A24. The film follows struggling New York City artist Billi (played by
Awkwafina in her first dramatic role), who travels to China for a family reunion to visit her dying grandmother. The family has decided to keep the truth about her condition a secret from Nai Nai (Mandarin for "grandmother") and sets up a wedding as a pretense for their reunion. Wang based the film on her own grandmother's illness, which also included her family setting up a wedding as a pretense; the film opens with a title card stating
Based on an actual lie. The film is presented for the most part in
Mandarin Chinese with English subtitles. It was filmed in the neighborhood where Wang's grandmother lived and Wang cast her actual great aunt Lu Hong to play herself in the film.
Thrillist, and
Rolling Stone. Despite being an award winning film now, Lulu Wang struggled with American financiers when pitching the movie The Farewell. It was suggested to Wang that she added a prominent white character into her movie and to switch the genre of the movie from drama to comedy. Even when pitching the movie to a Chinese financier, incorporating a white character was suggested. “People are so influenced by Hollywood” Wang says and she strived to break out that box by refusing to “whitewash” the film. In an IndieWire critics survey published after the festival,
The Farewell was voted Best Film and Best Screenplay and Wang was voted Best Director. The film holds a 99% Critics Consensus rating on
Rotten Tomatoes, based on 207 reviews. In January 2019,
Variety named Wang one of ten "Directors to Watch." In an interview with the publication, she described her next project as "very grounded science fiction."
The Farewell opened in limited release in four US theaters on July 12, 2019. The film opened to a gross of $351,330, averaging $87,833 per theater, surpassing the average of
Avengers: Endgame which averaged $76,601 in 4,662 theaters for a gross of $357,115,007 on its opening weekend.
The Farewell was released nationwide in the US on August 2, 2019. The film attracted less interest in China, however, leading
Variety to label it a box office "flop" in China, then the world's second-largest film market. On December 4, 2019, the
American Film Institute announced that
The Farewell was one of that year's ten recipients of the
2019 AFI Awards for "films that are culturally and artistically representative" of 2019's "most significant achievements in the art of the moving image." For her role as Billi, Awkwafina was awarded the
Golden Globe Award for
Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy on January 5, 2020.
The Farewell won the
Independent Spirit Award for Best Feature at the
35th Independent Spirit Awards in
Santa Monica, California on February 8, 2020. When awarded for her movie
The Farewell, Wang dedicated her speech to talk about the lack of female director nominees. Wang states programs and encouragement are not "enough" and that the filmmaking industry needs to give women more jobs. Lulu Wang further emphasized the importance of making the same bets on female filmmakers as they do with male filmmakers. On January 28, 2021
Apple released an 11-minute short film called
Nian written and directed by Wang, celebrating the 2021
Chinese New Year. The short film was shot in its entirety using an
iPhone 12 Pro Max. Wang's next project is a film adaptation of
Alexander Weinstein's collection of science fiction short stories,
Children of the New World. She has said that the project "centers on questions of family." Most recently, she, along with Dani Melia had launched Local Time Productions, with a first-look deal at Amazon Studios. ==Personal life==