No, I'm not talking about the "reality" spring break movie filmed in Cancun. I saw the flick Better Luck Tomorrow today. Me and the Mrs really enjoyed it. In Houston it's only playing at the AMC 30 on Dunvale and Angelica downtown. Made up of mainly a cast of Asian newcomers, this film is getting a lot of good reviews. It gotta be one of the better movies I've seen that is geared toward teens, and for an old fart like me that is saying something. Keep your eyes open for Karin Anna Cheung. She's a cutie. trailer: http://www.betterlucktomorrow.com/html/index.php?id=trailer&ImgId=01&banid=trailer I don't feel like giving a complete blow by blow rundown of everything that happened so here's the Rotten Tomatoes synopsis: Everyone knows a person like Ben - the perfect Asian American high school teen - extremely intelligent, a perfectionist, overachiever whose tunnel vision leads to nothing less than graduating at the top of the class and acceptance to the best Ivy League university. Ben lives in an upper middle class, conservative suburb of Orange County, California. As Ben struggles to achieve social success in high school, we discover his darker side. Along with two friends, Virgil, a brilliant yet awkward, overeager and socially inept misfit, and Virgil's cousin Han, a lost soul with more brawn than brains, Ben leads a double life of mischief and petty crimes that alleviate the pressures of perfection. At the start of his high school freshman year, Ben befriends Daric, the senior valedictorian ? another archetypical overachiever and perfectionist. But Daric is somewhat odd. While being the most intelligent student in the class, he also seems to be the most volatile and dangerous. Behind his trusting and benevolent façade lies a lurking secret, a timebomb ready to explode. With Daric at the helm, this group of misfit teens bands together into a suburban gang. As their adopted identity grows, Ben and the gang tumble into a downward spiral of excitement, excess, fun and growing danger. Ben's life careens out of control, into an intoxicating mix of sex, drugs and crime, leading to a surprisingly chaotic and violent end that will leave audiences engrossed, speechless and ultimately disturbed. -- © Trailing Johnson Productions
I've seen several previews on it, I definitely hope to check it out. I believe it was nominated for an award or something...
I want to see Cancun too, but I defintely want to see BTL. I've heard alot of **** about. I don't want to see it with asian folks too, because I already know what their response is like.
What, you guys didn't like Dead Man on Campus? This movie looked pretty good until I saw that big fat MTV logo at the end of the preview. But it has been getting really good reviews. http://movies.yahoo.com/shop?d=hv&id=1808432813&cf=critic I'm gonna check it out.
I totally agree. Movies that are based around teens are typically made for high school girls (She's all That, Bring it On, etc), scary movies (Scream, Know What you Did Last Summer, etc..), or raunchy comedies (American Pie). Not to say I don't like any of those types of movies, but the films that try to depict adolescense in a more serious, realistic way are some of my favorites. <b>Better Luck Tomorrow</b> is definitely the best movie I've seen so far this year. And calling it a "teen movie" doesn't really do it justice. A lot is being made of how everyone involved with the movie was Asian. There was even some idiot who said it was "demeaning." But other than a few minor parts, the fact that they were Asian doesn't have a whole lot of bearing on the film. And I think that's one of the best things about the movie, is that just about anyone can relate to it - not just people of a particular race. All in all, I hope the movie brings about more opportunites to Asians in the film industry, because they've pretty much been unrepresented. Watching all of these teen movies of the past couple of years, you wouldn't even know Asian-American teenagers existed. They couldn't have had a very big budget for the movie, but it still looked great. There were a lot of cool cinematography and camera shots. The director deserves a lot of praise for bringing such a risky film to life. Anyways, I strongly recommend it if you can find a theatre where it's playing. As for it being the first good movie by MTV, I take it you didn't see <b>Election</b>?
If I remember correctly it was made independently and MTV bought the rights to it after it got good reviews at some smaller film festivals. That explains the non-suck quite a bit.
Election was very good. So good, in fact, that I forgot it was an MTV film. Cheung reminded me a lot of a younger, even prettier Lucy Liu, sans freckles. I don't see how this movie was "demeaning" to Asians. My wife happens to be Asian and she laughed when I just mentioned that to her. What about Jackie Chan? He is the ultimate Asian stereotype. I thought the cast of BLT was great, especially the fact that they don't have a lot of movie experience for the most part.
They have a pretty good trailer at the movie's website if anyone's interested: http://www.betterlucktomorrow.com Yeah, I don't either. Here's a little blurb I found about it. http://www.destroy-all-monsters.com/bltlook.shtml A heated Q and A at the film's third Sundance screening addressed "Better Luck Tomorrow's" more controversial and subversive elements. Following the screening, one enraged audience member asked Lin how he could "make such a bleak, negative, amoral film." "What kind of portrait is this of Asian Americans?" he asked. "Don't you have a responsibility to paint a more positive and helpful portrait of your community?" The audience member's views on race and representation elicited an intelligent discourse from the rest of the crowd. After Lin and his cast defended "Better Luck Tomorrow," film critic Roger Ebert chimed in with the following articulate and succinct response: "What I find offensive and condescending about your statement is nobody would say to a bunch of white filmmakers, 'How could you do this to your people?' This film has the right to be about these people, and Asian American characters have the right to be whoever they want to be. The problem of representation has long been addressed by cultural and media critics, who have argued that films like "Better Luck Tomorrow" do not portray their race in a "negative" light. Instead, they expand the complexity of racial categories and chip away at essentialist perceptions. "One of the things we wanted to do with this film was to redefine what a 'positive portrayal' is," Lin says of his film. "The word 'positive' is very loaded. It can be misconstrued as a 'feel good' portrayal. I want to see Asian American faces in film. I want to see Asian American characters who have flaws, big or small. I want to see them exist in a world without having to explain themselves." "As an Asian American filmmaker, I wanted to make a movie that was real and non-apologetic," he continues, "I wanted to create a film space that did not define Asian Americans in opposition to whiteness, but rather, to establish them as active participants in the ever-evolving face of Americana. While the film heavily deals with identity politics, I tried to steer clear of being didactic or polemic." Lin is quick to point out that "Better Luck Tomorrow" may follow a group of Asian American teenagers, but its themes of identity, alienation, angst and violence are universal to all ages. "This film definitely has an Asian American perspective, but it also has universal elements that everyone can relate to. Everyone searches for an identity." "I think that what is positive and empowering is when you stay true to the essence of what you're trying to explore," Lin says. "I think as an artist, that's what you'd ultimately look for anyway not having any limitation or betrayal, and not always having to cast your characters in a bright, good light, like choir boys. For me, 'Better Luck Tomorrow' captures all these qualities."
Here is Eberts review: Justin Lin's "Better Luck Tomorrow" has a hero named Benjamin but depicts a chilling hidden side of suburban affluence that was unseen in "The Graduate." Its heroes need no career advice; they're on the fast track to Ivy League schools and well-paying jobs, and their straight-A grades are joined on their resumes by an improbable array of extracurricular credits: Ben lists the basketball team, the Academic Decathlon team and the food drive. What he doesn't mention is the thriving business he and his friends have in selling cheat sheets. Or their drug sideline. Or the box hidden in his bedroom and filled with cash. Ben belongs to a group of overachieving Asian-American students in a wealthy Orange County suburb; they conform to the popular image of smart, well-behaved Asian kids, but although they have ambition they lack values, and step by step they move more deeply into crime. How deep is suggested by the film's opening scene, where Ben (Parry Shen) and his best friend, Virgil (Jason Tobin), are interrupted while sunbathing by the sound of a cell phone ringing on a body they have buried in Virgil's backyard. "Better Luck Tomorrow" is a disturbing and skillfully told parable about growing up in today's America. These kids use money as a marker of success, are profoundly amoral, and project a wholesome, civic-minded attitude. They're on the right path to take jobs with the Enrons of tomorrow, in the dominant culture of corporate greed. Lin focuses on an ethnic group that is routinely praised for its industriousness, which deepens the irony, and also perhaps reveals a certain anger at the way white America patronizingly smiles on its successful Asian-American citizens. Ben, Virgil and their friends know how to use their ethnic identity to play both sides of the street in high school. "Our straight A's were our passports to freedom," Ben says in his narration. No parents are ever seen in the movie (there are very few adults, mostly played by white actors in roles reserved in most movies for minority groups). The kids get good grades and their parents assume they are studying, while they stay out late and get into very serious trouble. "Better Luck Tomorrow" has all the obligatory elements of the conventional high school picture. Ben has a crush on the pretty cheerleader Stephanie Vandergosh (Karin Anna Cheung), but she dates Steve (John Cho), who plays the inevitable older teenager with a motorcycle and an attitude. Virgil is unlucky with girls, but thinks he once spotted Stephanie in a porno film (unlikely, but gee, it kinda looks like her). Han (Sung Kang) comes up with the scheme to sell homework for cash, and Daric (Roger Fan) is the overachiever who has, no doubt, the longest entry under his photo in the school yearbook. These students never refer to, or are identified by, specific ethnic origin; they're known as the "Chinese Mafia" at school because of their low-key criminal activities, but that's not a name they give themselves. They may be Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Filipino, but their generation no longer obsesses with the nation before the hyphen; they are Orange County Americans, through and through, and although Stephanie's last name and Caucasian little brother indicate she was adopted, she brushes aside Ben's tentative question about her "real parents" by saying, "These are my real parents." "Better Luck Tomorrow" is a coming-of-age film for Asian Americans in American cinema. Like African-American films that take race for granted and get on with the characters and the story, Lin is making a movie where race is not the point but simply the given. After Ben joins the basketball team, a writer for the high school paper suggests he is the "token Asian" bench-warmer, and when students form a cheering section for him, he quits the team in disgust. He is not a token anything (and privately knows he has beaten the NBA record for free throws). The story is insidious in the way it moves stealthily into darker waters while maintaining the surface of a high school comedy. There are jokes and the usual romantic breakthroughs and reversals, and the progress of their criminal career seems unplanned and offhand, until it turns dangerous. I will not reveal the names of the key characters in the climactic scene, but note carefully what happens in terms of the story; perhaps the film is revealing that a bland exterior can hide seething resentment. Justin Lin, who directed, co-wrote and co-produced, here reveals himself as a skilled and sure director, a rising star. His film looks as glossy and expensive as a megamillion studio production, and the fact that its budget was limited means that his cinematographer, Patrice Lucien Cochet; his art director, Yoo Jung Han, and the other members of his crew were very able and resourceful. It's one thing to get an expensive look with money and another thing to get it with talent. Lin keeps a sure hand on tricky material; he has obvious confidence about where he wants to go and how he wants to get there. His film is uncompromising and doesn't chicken out with a U-turn ending. His actors expand and breathe as if they're captives just released from lesser roles (the audition reel of one actor, Lin recalls, showed him delivering pizzas in one movie after another). Parry Shen gives a watchful and wary undertone to his all-American boy, and Karin Anna Cheung finds the right note to deal with a boy she likes but finds a little too-goody. "Better Luck Tomorrow" is not just a thriller, not just a social commentary, not just a comedy or a romance, but all of those in a clearly seen, brilliantly made film. Copyright © Chicago Sun-Times Inc.
As a filipino, I automatically want to see this movie. Did any of yall see a filipino movie that was released last September called "The Debut". That was a filipino movie and mainly showed how a high school senior that had to choose between his heritage/family or his high school friends. Was pretty good and hoping that it will be on DVD soon.
I can't put it into words exactly how to say how they would react. Give me ten years away from high school to think about it. I have eight more years before I give that answer.
Ya know, I guess it takes ten seconds instead of ten years removed from high school, but it would be like. Yeah, Yeah, that's us right there. That guy is my new boy, right there. yeah. I think it might be a little bandwagon-ish.
The director Justin Lin will be here on the UT campus on Thursday at 2:30 pm showing a documentary about making the movie.
I enjoyed the movie, as a Korean-American. I thought it'd be more stereotypical than it was. With little things like having the guy drive a Honda Civic, rather than an old Mustang... As an Asian, I can't deny that seems to be the preferred car of a lot of Asians I see. I loved the symbolism in the movie. (Spoiler coming up) I think when the girl drives up in the Audi TT, it's symbolic of her upgrading from her old Integra, like how she "upgraded" from her ex boyfriend to Ben.
Did you see American Adobo? Not that it was great or anything, but it was also a Filipino movie released recently.
SPOILER!!! I thought the best part occurred at the end when Ben, out of nowhere, asks Daric why he wrote the article. And you realize that had he remained on the basketball team that probably none of this would ever have happened. It's obvious that Ben blames himeself and regrets his decision, but the way he desperately asks that one last time was pretty heart-breaking...at least to me.
Good catch. I didn't think of that when it occured. The movie was chock full of subtleties that kept you on your toes.