Hsu’s performance does a lot of the work here, but it’s enhanced by the film’s hair and makeup team, led by hair department head Anissa E. Salazar and makeup department head Michelle Chung. “[Jobu] was really like an extreme version of herself, so it was really important to show that there was such a big difference between [Jobu and Joy],” Chung told IndieWire. But Chung also treated Jobu a bit like Joy’s inner teenager, acting out and blotting security guards out of existence because of the extreme, zero-sum pressure of her emotions.
Related ‘The Witcher: Blood Origin’ Signals Trouble for the Franchise Going Forward Cate Blanchett Sees a ‘Carol’ Connection in ‘Everything Everywhere’ Hot Dog Fingers Subplot Related 2023 Oscars: ‘Avatar’ Is the One to Beat in Visual Effects 51 Directors’ Favorite Horror Movies: Bong Joon Ho, Quentin Tarantino, Guillermo del Toro, and More
The different versions of Jobu offer slightly different articulations of hopelessness and nihilism eating away at Joy, even if Jobu’s vibe varies a little bit every time we see her. But contrast is always important. Joy dresses in dark jeans and flannels, with unstyled hair and natural makeup — if she’s wearing any makeup at all — that try to act as an invisibility cloak. Jobu’s looks are always loud, specific, and almost angrily full of color, drawing the eye with bold geometry through hair styling and face shaping — as in one of Chung’s favorite looks, where she turned Hsu’s face into a Picasso painting. The contrast makes it clear not just who Hsu is playing at any one moment, but that Jobu is an articulation of everything Joy cannot say.
Allyson Riggs/A24
Salazar told IndieWire that bringing Jobu’s looks to life was an incredibly collaborative process. “Whether it was like a piece of clothing, of a texture or color fabric that Shirley had, or we knew there was gonna be like a certain light or a certain set decoration or just something little to give us an idea to then run with that,” she said. “This isn’t the kind of movie, like a period film, where most of those characters fit [a given aesthetic], and you can get the vibe from there. The looks had to be vivid to match those character traits [and] to carry the story.”
That kind of collaborative effort would’ve been impossible if “Everything Everywhere All at Once” didn’t make deliberate choices to bring the departments together. Chung and Salazar said they’d get a sense of what worlds they’d be stepping into on a given day based on a creative warm-up in the morning for everyone, led by directors Daniel Kwan and Daniel Scheinert. While being trapped in the same IRS office building may have been stressful for the characters, everyone on the crew being together helped each department. Allyson Riggs “Everyone was in the same building at the same time,” Chung said. “So compared to different shoots where costumes might be like in another building or somewhere, we could literally run from room to room and be like, ‘Hey, I’m thinking about this. What do you think?’ Shirley would run over and be like, ‘I’m thinking about like putting pearls on Temple Jobu and then she would give me some pearls and I’d be, ‘Oh my God, maybe I’ll put pearls on her face,’” That sense of play is important to all the characters, but especially to Jobu. She has incredible and terrifying universe-altering powers, yes, but also hair and makeup that is as emotional as the most emo teenager and as unhinged and playful as a little kid grabbing at the items laid out on a vanity. The inner child Salazar and Chung subtly bring out through some otherwise bold looks helps the audience to come to feel as Evelyn does: That Jobu should be defeated, but not killed; that Joy has to be saved. The hair and makeup team on “Everything Everywhere” gets to have their cake and eat it, doing that sort of quiet emotional shift through some gloriously demented styling that includes everything from turning Yeoh into a Chinese opera star to making Hsu’s hair look like a bagel. “Michelle and I both started in horror films and indies, so we are already trained to do a quick makeup or a quick hair change,” Salazar said. “So it was really, really exciting to mimic a lot of these looks, whether it was gonna be that stunning Chinese opera look, or creating our own, like the K-pop, or Elvis Jobu — something glitz and glam and Vegas, you know? It was amazing to just have a lot of creativity to run around with. It’s every artist’s dream.” Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.