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Posts tagged: review

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‘The White Tiger’: A rags-to-revenge story

February 16, 2021
by Aditya Sharma

Written By: Aditya Sharma   Disclaimer: spoilers ahead! In the first two minutes of Netflix’s “The White Tiger” we hear the opening to Punjabi MC and Jay-Z’s “Beware of The Boys” and see a man dressed as a Maharajah swerve out of the way of an oncom ...

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‘Minari’ — Family matters

February 8, 2021
by Jeremy Lim

Written By: Jeremy Lim A touching and heartfelt story about what it means to be a Korean American immigrant, Lee Isaac Chung’s “Minari” takes an incredibly personal account of Arkansas in the 1980s and turns it into something that can be understood by al ...

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‘All My Life’: When truth fails as fiction

January 12, 2021
by Nathan Liu

Written By: Nathan Liu There’s a saying in storytelling, “Truth is stranger than fiction.” In my opinion, a more appropriate phrase would be “Some truths don’t work as fiction.” There are certain stories that, when presented in a fictional context — ...

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‘A Sugar & Spice Holiday’: The ground has been broken, now let’s build something

December 21, 2020
by Jeremy Lim

Written By: Jeremy Lim This article contains spoilers. In my last article discussing the possibilities for Asian American Christmas films in the future, I ended the piece by spotlighting a Lifetime made-for-TV movie that was slated to come ...

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PBS’ ‘Asian American’ series — visualizing voices of resistance

December 18, 2020
by Kano Umezaki

Written By: Kano Umezaki   This is the first article to a two-part series reviewing the “Asian Americans” For Asians who are often made invisible in the American colonial imagination, documentary filmmaking becomes a crucial praxis for revisionist s ...

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‘A Thousand Cuts’ shows how disinformation is a universal problem

October 8, 2020
by Demi Guo

Written By: Demi Guo   “A Thousand Cuts” is a necessary watch for those who want to understand what “fake news” means — and how it goes beyond the United States’ borders. It follows Maria Ressa, a Filipino American journalist, in her fight against di ...

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‘The Donut King’ reminds us who America is

October 2, 2020
by CineVue

Written By: Michelle Ahn   In the northeast, America runs on Dunkin, but on the west coast, Americans relied on one of its immigrants to get their donut fix. “The Donut King” follows the life of Ted Ngoy, from his immigration story as a Cambodian ref ...

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Mechanized racism: Shalini Kantaya’s ‘Coded Bias’

September 30, 2020
by Kano Umezaki

Written By: Kano Umezaki When MIT Media Lab researcher, Joy Buolamwini, finds that face-recognition softwares fail to identify darker-skinned people, she discovers that anti-Blackness is pervasive within the fabric of the digital world.  Sha ...

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‘Monsoon’: A travel log of change

September 29, 2020
by Nathan Liu

Written By: Nathan Liu   So often in fiction, the narrative of the Vietnam War is centered on the experiences of American soldiers, whether it be their loss of innocence in “Platoon” (1986), or their inability to return to civilian life in “First Blo ...

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