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IMPORTANT & NOTEWORTHY FILMS
FEATURING ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICANS

Films in 1994 (Part 1)
Click HERE for Part 2


HOSTILE INTENTIONS
(1994)

Directed by Catherine Cyran
Cast:
Tia Carrere, Rigg Kennedy, Tricia Leigh Fisher, Lisa Dean Ryan, Carlos Gómez, Roman Cisneros, Luis Antonio Ramos, Ramón Franco, Geoffrey Rivas, Christina Solis, Oscar Peralta, Romeo Rene Fabian, Frank Aragon, Martha Romo, Mark Adair-Rios, Yorgo Constantine, Kevin Stapleton, James Pickens Jr., Giles Hunt, Margaret Medina, Mike Carter, Dawn McMillan, Robin Curtis, Sam Vlahos, Christopher Darga, Jack Verell, Jim Wise

The portrayal of Mexicans in this straight-to-video, south-of-the-border thriller is kind of problematic. However, Filipina American heartthrob Tia Carrere is cast in a color-blind lead role. Now, how often does that happen?

Click HERE to purchase this film featuring the delicious Tia Carriere.

Purchase this Joan Chen film by CLICKING HERE

GOLDEN GATE
(1994)

Directed by John Madden
Cast: Matt Dillon, Joan Chen, Bruno Kirby

This film was written by David Henry Hwang and is truer to his critique of colonialism than the compromised motion picture version of his stage play "M. Butterfly" (see above). Set in the 1950s and '60s, a white F.B.I. agent (Dillon) feels remorseful about his persecution of an innocent Chinese American man (Tzi Ma), and he assuages his guilt by contriving a romantic relationship with the man's daughter (Chen). But the agent's past comes back to haunt him. This film's criticism is incisive: assuaging white, male colonial guilt with erotic fascination for Asian women solves nothing. The European creators of "Miss Saigon" could probably learn something here.

Click HERE to purchase this film

RAPA NUI
(1994)

Directed by Kevin Reynolds
Cast: Jason Scott Lee, Esai Morales, Sandrine Holt, Eru Potaka-Dewes, Emilio Tuki Hito, Gordon Hatfield, Frenxa Reuben, Hori Ahipene, Chiefy Elkington, Ruihana Rewa, George Henare, Rawiri Paratene, Pete Smith, Mario Gaia, Cliff Curtis, Willie Davis, Lawrence Makoare, Te Whatanui Skipwith, Nathaniel Lees, Grant McFarland, Wassie Shortland, Tania Simon, Rena Owen, Anzac Wallace, Rakai Karaitiana, Shane Dawson, Henry Vaeoso, Angela Gribben, Karaitiana Beazley, Jade Clayton, Jenni Heka, Pitake Tuki, Liseli Mutti, Michael Yost

Set on Easter Island before its "discovery" by Europeans, this film is a parable of ecological devastation. Director Reynolds ("Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves," "Waterworld") etches his environmentalism with a heavy hand (at one point, we see Jason Scott Lee hugging a tree--literally!). Still, this take on the eternal love triangle is well told and impressively photographed. And it's a nice change of pace to see a story of the Pacific Islands with--get this! --Pacific Islanders as the main characters, played by an Asian/Latino cast (Easter Island is now governed by Chile). A refreshing reminder that the history of the South Pacific didn't begin with the explorer Captain Cook and the painter Gauguin.

Purchase this film that features Asians who reside in Canada by CLICKING HERE!

DOUBLE HAPPINESS
(1994)

Directed by Mina Shum
Cast:
Sandra Oh, Stephen M.D. Chang, Alannah Ong

Bursting with all the energy and hunger of a first-time director, Mina Shum whimsically tracks the travails and triumphs of a young Chinese Canadian actress as she breaks away from her traditional immigrant family.

Sandra Oh ("Arli$$") won the Canadian equivalent of the Best Actress Oscar for her radiant performance in the lead role. Some have criticized this film's portrayal of its Asian men (they're either squares, gay, or middle-aged) and the lead character's relationship with a white guy. But this is no "white knight" fantasy (the final image shows the Oh character setting off on her own--not in her white lover's arms). And for all their faults, the Asian characters are ultimately human. Splendidly so. For another viewpoint, read what Guy Aoki of MANAA says about the film, or the Washington Post, the San Francisco Gate, or Box Office Magazine, or the review from Roger Ebert!

Mina Shum, the director/writer was born in Hong Kong and raised in Canada. She has written and directed six short films including Picture Perfect, which received the nomination for Best Drama under 30 minutes at the 1989 Yorkton Film Festival. As a director resident at the Canadian Film Centre, Ms. Shum developed her first feature length film, Double Happiness, which premiered at the 1994 Toronto International Film Festival and went on to win prizes in Vancouver, Torino, Italy and Berlin.

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