Nicole Kidman Convinced The Farewell Director Lulu Wang to Make Their New Prime Limited Series, Expats
Mar 2, 2024
Lulu Wang rose to prominence with her award-winning autobiographical film The Farewell in 2019. But it took some convincing from Nicole Kidman to get her to take on their new Prime Video limited series, Expats, which stars Kidman as an American woman living in Hong Kong.
Based on Janice Y.K. Lee’s 2016 novel The Expatriates, the six episode series follows the personal and professional lives of a tight-knit group of women, converging on the disappearance of Margaret’s young son.
Lulu Wang on Making Expats
“Ultimately, I ended up saying yes because I met with Nicole and she told me that she really wanted me to bring a vision and do something different,” Wang, a Chinese-born American director, tells MovieMaker.
Wang wanted to use Expats not only to spotlight Hong Kong — a place where her identity wasn’t always questioned — but to also delve into themes close to her heart, like grief, motherhood, female friendships, community, and loss. Kidman, an executive producer on the series, optioned the book in 2017.
“She was excited by the fact that we were making episode five, in which she wasn’t the center of it. In many ways, we need [to see] Margaret through the eyes of these other characters. And so, because she was so supportive of these out of the box ideas, I had to do it,” Wang says.
Also Read: 10 Movies Based on True Stories With Fictionalized Main Characters
Episode five of Expats screened at TIFF in September 2023.
“We all have our biases — how we enter a story is going to color how we see the rest of that world,” Wang adds. “It’s the same when you meet somebody. If you meet them when they’re very poor and they’re struggling, then you see one side of them. If you meet that same person, and you didn’t know them before when they were poor, you only know them in their success and in their wealth and privilege and you have a different judgment of them. But the reality is, people, the world and situations — there’s always multiple sides [to them].”
Nicole Kidman in Expats courtesy of Prime VideoWith Expats, Wang wanted to add to the conversations around privilege that have been raised so poignantly by projects like John M. Chu’s Crazy Rich Asians, Jesse Armstrong’s Succession, and Bong Joon-ho’s Parasite.
“There’s something fascinating about watching people who have a lot of money,” she says.
But she also wanted Expats to tell a story much bigger than identities like class, race, and gender — she wanted to show the human side of all the different people that make up the fabric of society.
“It is important to critique privilege when you see that it’s not just evil; when it’s actually very nuanced and it’s not so extreme. It’s all around us. I think that was why I took the approach that I did — so that we can, as the audience, sympathize with the characters,” she says.
She finds the idea that storytellers should only write about their own experiences “way too limiting.”
Unlike The Farewell, which was based on her own experience,s Expats is based on Wang’s own life. Instead, she drew on the diverse perspectives of the women in her all-female writers’ room.
“I had a shorthand with the writers – we never had to explain [anything] to each other. As a woman, this is how I would see things, so it was really natural having an all-female writers’ room,” she says.
“I think we need more stories for women, about women, by women, because there are just countless experiences. There’s no one way to do it. And I think that that range is what is exciting — that we get to be all of these different things and tell all of these different types of stories about women.”
She adds: “I really see filmmaking as a kind of spiritual personal growth. Every film that I make, I go on a journey with it. It teaches me so many things. So I’m just figuring out what that next opportunity for growth is.”
Expats is now streaming on Prime Video.
Main Image: Nicole Kidman and Brian Tee in Expats courtesy of Prime Video.
Publisher: Source link
Dishonest Media Under the Microscope in Documentary on Seymour Hersh
Back in the 1977, the legendary investigative journalist Seymour Hersh shifted his focus from geopolitics to the world of corporate impropriety. After exposing the massacre at My Lai and the paid silencing of the Watergate scandal, Hersh figured it was…
Dec 19, 2025
Heart, Hustle, and a Touch of Manufactured Shine
Song Sung Blue, the latest biographical musical drama from writer-director-producer Craig Brewer, takes a gentle, crowd-pleasing true story and reshapes it into a glossy, emotionally accessible studio-style drama. Inspired by Song Sung Blue by Greg Kohs, the film chronicles the…
Dec 19, 2025
After 15 Years, James L. Brooks Returns With an Inane Family Drama
To say James L. Brooks is accomplished is a wild understatement. Starting in television, Brooks went from early work writing on My Mother the Car (when are we going to reboot that?) to creating The Mary Tyler Moore Show and…
Dec 17, 2025
Meditation on Greek Tragedy Explores Identity & Power In The 21st Century [NYFF]
A metatextual exploration of identity, race, privilege, communication, and betrayal, “Gavagai” is a small story with a massive scope. A movie about a movie which is itself an inversion of classic tropes and themes, the film exists on several levels…
Dec 17, 2025






