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From Joy Luck to Better Luck The notion of a commercially viable Asian American cinema was revisited last April (2003) when MTV Films released Better Luck Tomorrow, an independently produced feature by emerging director Justin Lin. After a controversial run at Sundance in 2002, Better Luck was plucked from the festival hubbub in ample time to draw on its well-earned momentum. It was the first film the studio had ever bought for distribution, and MTV had publicly pledged to give it a major theatrical release replete with promotional bombardment. Lin's film is the first East Asian American feature widely marketed to a national audience since 1993's The Joy Luck Club. A fact that Lin's film is seemingly aware of, as it merges the very Chinese predilection toward good fortune with a traditionally Western idiom and assumes a self-conscious, slyly ironic acknowledgment of Joy Luck's exploits. Better Luck Tomorrow begins with a stereotype: upper-middle-class Asian American high school overachievers whose lives are defined by entry into an Ivy League school. The revelation here is that their social outlet is a double life of petty crime that quickly escalates beyond their control. It is an audacious and stylized portrayal of a phenomenon that is growing in suburban America's Asian community, and it challenges the prevailing idea of the Asian American experience as the model minority. Lin's film is knowingly brash and reactionary, aware of its double burden of defining the elusive concept of what constitutes the ethno-American experience and of engaging in Asian America's longtime struggle for legitimacy in the cinematic mainstream.
Ten years later, Wang would have another chance, directing Joy Luck, the adaptation of Amy Tan's bestseller. The film was a commercial success; the first of its kind, garnering high praise from mainstream critics but mixed reviews from the Asian American community. While Wang's effort was generally applauded, critics of the film (and Tan's novel) would come to cite its flaws, most notably its liberties regarding Chinese social customs. Box-office returns would prove that the film's latitude toward cultural exactness would hardly matter. Joy Luck remains the highest-grossing Asian American film to date, but as with Chan, it did not inspire a wave of films in this realm. Even Wang strayed from Chinese American content after its release, moving on to direct the independent crossover hits Smoke and Blue in the Face, and later, more dubious studio releases such as 1999's Anywhere But Here and the more recent Jennifer Lopez vehicle Maid in Manhattan. Films with markedly less melodramatic portrayals of China and Chinese Americans such as M. Butterfly and Ang Lee's The Wedding Banquet would find release in the '90s but with far less Hollywood fanfare and studio backing. The promise of an Asian American cinema in the mainstream seemed to be going unrealized, just as any critical discussion of Asian America's cinematic acceptance seemed to always begin with Chan and end with Joy Luck.
The film's emergence from a decade of commercially unsuccessful efforts may be just another benchmark to the halting progress of Asian American cinema. Lin's film will not be the measure of its own success. It will not matter whether or not the film is good or if audiences paid to see it. Its worth will depend, however unfairly, on the success of Asian American films to follow. With that said, the film is good enough and worth viewing even if solely because it is one of a short list of mainstream Asian American films to see. May 2003 | Issue
40 Ren Hsieh has a BFA in film production from New York University and is working on an experimental short on the subject of anti-Chinese propaganda in the 1900s. He works with children in a media program in New York's Chinatown. He plans to spend the summer of 2003 in Zanzibar working with experimental filmmaker Jon Yevin. ACCESS: The film's official website can be found here. Robert Ito's look at Hollywood "yellowface" from Bright Lights issue 18 can be found here. |