Jon M. Chu has photographic evidence. Before he directed โ€œWicked,โ€ the hit adaptation of the Broadway musical about a pair of witchy BFFs, Chu was an extra on โ€œThe Secret World of Alex Mack.โ€ And that Nickelodeon series, part of the TV diet for anyone growing up in the 1990s, marked the directorial debut of Shawn Levy, who would go on to make โ€œStranger Things,โ€ โ€œFree Guyโ€ and last summerโ€™s โ€œDeadpool & Wolverine.โ€ The two are meeting in New York to discuss their journeys to the top of Hollywoodโ€™s A-list, as well as their talent for making unabashedly commercial movies, featuring heroes and heroines with extraordinary abilities, that are also deeply personal. But before they get to that, Chu shares a screen grab of his fleeting moment being directed by Levy.

Levy is stunned, then reflective about those early days. โ€œI remember thinking, โ€˜Itโ€™s happening,โ€™โ€ he says. โ€œโ€˜All my dreams are coming true.โ€™ Then you realize thereโ€™s no straight lines in these careers. Itโ€™s ebbs and flows that take you to surprising places.โ€

The two directors are enjoying professional peaks, having made the highest-grossing films of their careers. Yet theyโ€™re more interested in discussing the detours and hurdles theyโ€™ve faced, and their love for making movies that are empathetic and hopeful at a time when those things are in short supply.

Shawn Levy: Why did you become a director?

Jon M. Chu: I grew up loving movies. I would look at behind-the-scenes footage of โ€œHookโ€ and see Spielberg there and the kids jumping in the water. Iโ€™m like, โ€œI want to play all day like that.โ€

Levy: Wasnโ€™t Spielberg an early supporter of yours?

Chu: My student film somehow got to Spielberg. We set up a script with DreamWorks. My first pitch was with Steven. It was like โ€œMoulin Rouge!โ€ We brought in a chest with wigs and hats and acted out the whole thing. And they bought it. But I didnโ€™t make my first movie until five years later. I freaked out when I couldnโ€™t get a movie made. For years, I asked, โ€œDo I even deserve to be here?โ€

Levy: I just saw โ€œWickedโ€ and loved it. That theme that you articulated of โ€œDo I deserve to be here?โ€ is what Elphaba is struggling with too.

Chu: That character spoke to me. We all want to be Elphaba. You want to see her burst into her power. When you started, how insecure were you?

Levy: I finished shooting my last scene after a decade of โ€œStranger Things.โ€ I flew back last night, thinking about that show. With โ€œStranger Things,โ€ itโ€™s about a group of people who question their value, who find each other, and who find superpowers in connection. I grew up in a divorced household with an alcoholic mom, and it was like, โ€œI want to build the life I wish I was living.โ€ I see now a lot of the work Iโ€™ve done is aspirational and about attaining this dream.

Chu: Definitely. โ€œWizard of Ozโ€ means so much to my parents, who were immigrants. Thereโ€™s the Yellow Brick Road โ€” this was the American dream. I was going to USC at the time I saw โ€œWicked.โ€ I flew back to San Francisco and went with them. Watching it blew my mind.

I love that weโ€™re talking about our journeys, because I donโ€™t talk to people about the expectations that are placed on you as a director. Part of my self-consciousness was I wanted to be a director, not an Asian director. And I love to make joyful movies that take you to another place and that have love. At film school it was like youโ€™re not artsy if youโ€™re not talking about blood and guts, murder and drugs. Your movies, Spielbergโ€™s movies, were this light in the horizon saying, โ€œYou can put this into the universe.โ€

Levy: โ€œWickedโ€ and โ€œDeadpool & Wolverineโ€ are both of our biggest movies to date as far as complexity, scale, expectation, budget. How did you navigate the pressure?

Chu: Part of that was protecting the things that I already loved about โ€œWicked.โ€ I knew if I found those two women โ€ฆ First of all, if you didnโ€™t find them, you donโ€™t make the movie.

Levy: Did you audition unknowns as well as famous people like Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande?

Chu: We did. I thought thatโ€™s the way we were going to go first. I was like, โ€œWe donโ€™t need name people,โ€ but the reality is those songs are very hard. It takes a professional. For โ€œDeadpool & Wolverine,โ€ was the pressure enormous?

Levy: People assumed the pressure would be โ€œOh, itโ€™s my first Marvel movie, and the MCU needs a big hit.โ€ It had been years since โ€œEndgame,โ€ and when we were prepping, โ€œQuantumaniaโ€ came out. I expected Marvel was going to be intense. It wasnโ€™t. We worked for months to come up with โ€œDeadpool 3.โ€ We did not crack it. Every idea felt either too big and bombastic for โ€œDeadpoolโ€ or too small for Marvel. We failed. We scheduled a Zoom to tell Kevin Feige, โ€œLetโ€™s come back to this in a year or two.โ€ On that day, Hugh [Jackman] called and said, โ€œI had an epiphany. I want to be with Deadpool.โ€ He had no idea the movie was going to evaporate. From the minute Hugh called, I knew what it would be. Itโ€™s a friendship-redemption-road trip movie like โ€œMidnight Runโ€ or โ€œ48 Hrs.โ€

Chu: What I loved about the movie is itโ€™s saying the most current things.

Levy: Weโ€™re shooting a scene, and Ryan [Reynolds] starts: โ€œCan we be done with the multiverse thing? Itโ€™s not great.โ€ Then he goes, โ€œItโ€™s just been miss after miss.โ€ Iโ€™m at the monitor going, โ€œOh, shit. I canโ€™t believe it.โ€ But Marvel backed us.

Can I give you a compliment? I have not seen a musical adaptation employ the tools of cinema in a way that felt this additive. Your visual humor was fucking impressive.

Chu: When I did โ€œCrazy Rich Asians,โ€ I got to take all those lessons of comedy and camerawork and put it in this thing thatโ€™s personal to me. When that works out, it changes the way I feel about myself and what I have to say.

Levy: With โ€œWickedโ€ and โ€œCrazy Rich Asiansโ€ you took ownership of making movies that inspire delight. You want to take people out of the real world into this dark theater. You want to give them a feeling. A great movie becomes, if youโ€™re lucky, a life memory.

Chu: When itโ€™s released theatrically is it different?

Levy: Yeah. Look, [the Netflix film] โ€œThe Adam Projectโ€ is one of the best filmmaking experiences Iโ€™ve ever had. Itโ€™s one of the best movies Iโ€™ve made. Iโ€™ll keep working in streaming, but theatrical penetrates culture differently. It sticks with people because theyโ€™ve made that choice to leave home and get babysitters. Theyโ€™re there with an intention to connect with that story.

Chu: I felt the same making โ€œWicked.โ€ This is our opportunity to show why cinema should exist. It was like, โ€œThis is Oz.โ€ One of the most iconic cinematic palettes of color, shape, form, and we get to go dance in it.

Levy: Iโ€™ve not seen a person of color play Elphaba. I donโ€™t know if that choice was controversial. Iโ€™m sure some people embraced it and others were shitty. But it changed the dimensions. The casting choice brought out themes that are innate in the show, but never overtly so.

Chu: Thatโ€™s Cynthia. When she came in and she sang words Iโ€™ve heard a million times โ€” โ€œSomething has changed within me, somethingโ€™s not the sameโ€ โ€” all the context changed.

Levy: Were the vocals recorded live on set?

Chu: Itโ€™s 99% recorded on set. We had a live pianist every day. The power of singing live was they didnโ€™t have to be on tempo. They could take all the breath in the world, the wind could kick up, they could feel it and then they could go into the next phrase.

Talking about tone, how did you decide when Wolverine or Logan would hear the joke that Deadpool was saying at any point? Itโ€™s like the divorce line [referencing Jackmanโ€™s recent divorce]. He didnโ€™t hear it. You didnโ€™t see the reaction. It just existed.

Levy: The first day Hugh shot, he spoke to the camera. Ryan was like, โ€œOh, no, buddy. Only Deadpool breaks the fourth wall.โ€ The rule tends to be if Deadpool is addressing the camera, the other characters donโ€™t notice. Thereโ€™s a joke where we go, this is Logan. Heโ€™s normally shirtless, but he let himself go after the divorce. Deadpool is an equal-opportunity offender, but we cleared that with Hugh before we laid it out in front of the crew and the world.

Chu: I love at the end of โ€œDeadpoolโ€ when Logan is asked: โ€œWhere are you going to go?โ€ Heโ€™s like, โ€œI donโ€™t know, but Iโ€™ll figure it out.โ€ Thatโ€™s me when I make a movie.

Levy: We both are lucky that we get to tell stories that both entertain and provide hope.