CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.1/10
1.3 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Cuando Sasha Li, una chica rica y mimada, malgasta la mayor parte de su fondo fiduciario, su padre la deshereda y la obliga a regresar a China para trabajar en el negocio familiar de juguete... Leer todoCuando Sasha Li, una chica rica y mimada, malgasta la mayor parte de su fondo fiduciario, su padre la deshereda y la obliga a regresar a China para trabajar en el negocio familiar de juguetes.Cuando Sasha Li, una chica rica y mimada, malgasta la mayor parte de su fondo fiduciario, su padre la deshereda y la obliga a regresar a China para trabajar en el negocio familiar de juguetes.
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Elenco
- Premios
- 3 premios ganados y 5 nominaciones en total
- Dirección
- Guionista
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
This film is quite a surprise family drama that is very relatable for many children of parents working overseas. I liked how they did not shy away from showing the cultural fact that many successful Asian business men do take on many wives and mistresses yet unlike the west it is culturally acceptable to do so. Having Sasha the lead having to deal with all these dynamics was interesting to see. I liked how she was not black and white and while being kind she could also be selfish - that natural character progression is harder to find these days.
The lack of romantic connections was quite a surprise in the film and I must say this was a good thing. Sometimes life does not need to be filled with romance- I think this is what others might have expected. I much preferred this movie over a Crazy Rich Asians where most of the cast was filled with one dimensional characters!
Dispite the lead being good in her role I was quite surprised they choose a Japanese-American woman to play the part of a Chinese-American? Is that not like throwing Asians of all ethnicities into one basket?!
Overall a good Sunday Afternoon watch on some downtime.
The lack of romantic connections was quite a surprise in the film and I must say this was a good thing. Sometimes life does not need to be filled with romance- I think this is what others might have expected. I much preferred this movie over a Crazy Rich Asians where most of the cast was filled with one dimensional characters!
Dispite the lead being good in her role I was quite surprised they choose a Japanese-American woman to play the part of a Chinese-American? Is that not like throwing Asians of all ethnicities into one basket?!
Overall a good Sunday Afternoon watch on some downtime.
Search Shenzhen in YouTube and you'll see how biased this movie is.
You know its not great and maybe not even good but it doesnt suck either, i like the characters from the old man to the little kids
glad i seen it but its not a do over.
Greetings again from the darkness. Seeing Chinese films reach mainstream status is a nice development in a cinematic industry that too often segments by nationality. Jon M Chu's CRAZY RICH ASIANS was a huge hit in 2018, and then last year Lulu Wang's brilliant THE FAREWELL was a favorite. Now comes a semi-autobiographical tale from writer-director-producer Emily Ting. All three films revolve around Americanized young adults revisiting their Chinese roots, though each for different reasons.
Anna Akana stars as Sasha Li, a twenty-something one year removed from fashion school. We first see her on her birthday botching a job interview and running up a monster bar tab with her posse of friends at the club that night. Having ignored calls from her father in China, she is shocked and humiliated when she discovers her dad has cut her off from the trust fund she has been blowing through living the high life in Los Angeles. As viewers, we are immediately turned off by Sasha's immaturity and spoiled self. When her dad offers her a deal ... come back to China and work in his toy factory for a year in order to get her trust fund back, we (and her friends) see it as a no-brainer. But it's not until she gets an eviction notice and discovers her mother (Kelly Hu) is also being cut off, that she makes the decision to head back to the homeland.
Once Sasha is back in China, all of the pieces to the puzzle are present. It's a dysfunctional family headed by the father Teddy (Richard Ng) who seems dedicated to being a successful businessman, while proclaiming he's doing it all for the family ... a family that consists of multiple offspring from multiple women. His oldest daughter Carol (Lynn Chen) is Sasha's half-sister, though they barely know each other. Carol has been a dutiful loyal soldier to dad's toy company, and a bit envious of Sasha's free-wheeling lifestyle. Carol believes she has paid her dues, and it's now time for Sasha to pay hers. Sasha also meets two younger half-siblings, as well as a particularly young Lulu (Kendy Cheung), whose role Teddy describes as "she takes care of me." Yuck.
What happens next is relatively predictable. Sasha's fashion design skills prove valuable to dad's stale line of toys, so her ideas bring new life to the company and the employees. The latter are impacted by Sasha's insistence on better working conditions. Of course, Sasha being Sasha, her lack of business savvy leads to problems and a fallout. The film's wrap up is a bit too clean for the real world, but Ms. Akana has managed to win us over by this point, so we are apt to overlook the script and story issues.
Richard Ng seems a bit too old for his role as Teddy, but he excels in the business scenes where frustrations boil over. Teddy fails miserably as a father or relationship partner, but his instincts with Sasha seem sincere. Filmmaker Ting includes some commentary on social and cultural issues in China, including the 'One Child Policy', and the labor practices and family pressures. The film is part 'coming of age', part 'coming home', and part 'coming to grips'. The life lessons for Sasha are quite clear as she transitions from spoiled princess to reality-based citizen. Her family may still be packed with dysfunction, but then, whose isn't? Part of maturity is learning to deal with it, and understand that family does matter.
Anna Akana stars as Sasha Li, a twenty-something one year removed from fashion school. We first see her on her birthday botching a job interview and running up a monster bar tab with her posse of friends at the club that night. Having ignored calls from her father in China, she is shocked and humiliated when she discovers her dad has cut her off from the trust fund she has been blowing through living the high life in Los Angeles. As viewers, we are immediately turned off by Sasha's immaturity and spoiled self. When her dad offers her a deal ... come back to China and work in his toy factory for a year in order to get her trust fund back, we (and her friends) see it as a no-brainer. But it's not until she gets an eviction notice and discovers her mother (Kelly Hu) is also being cut off, that she makes the decision to head back to the homeland.
Once Sasha is back in China, all of the pieces to the puzzle are present. It's a dysfunctional family headed by the father Teddy (Richard Ng) who seems dedicated to being a successful businessman, while proclaiming he's doing it all for the family ... a family that consists of multiple offspring from multiple women. His oldest daughter Carol (Lynn Chen) is Sasha's half-sister, though they barely know each other. Carol has been a dutiful loyal soldier to dad's toy company, and a bit envious of Sasha's free-wheeling lifestyle. Carol believes she has paid her dues, and it's now time for Sasha to pay hers. Sasha also meets two younger half-siblings, as well as a particularly young Lulu (Kendy Cheung), whose role Teddy describes as "she takes care of me." Yuck.
What happens next is relatively predictable. Sasha's fashion design skills prove valuable to dad's stale line of toys, so her ideas bring new life to the company and the employees. The latter are impacted by Sasha's insistence on better working conditions. Of course, Sasha being Sasha, her lack of business savvy leads to problems and a fallout. The film's wrap up is a bit too clean for the real world, but Ms. Akana has managed to win us over by this point, so we are apt to overlook the script and story issues.
Richard Ng seems a bit too old for his role as Teddy, but he excels in the business scenes where frustrations boil over. Teddy fails miserably as a father or relationship partner, but his instincts with Sasha seem sincere. Filmmaker Ting includes some commentary on social and cultural issues in China, including the 'One Child Policy', and the labor practices and family pressures. The film is part 'coming of age', part 'coming home', and part 'coming to grips'. The life lessons for Sasha are quite clear as she transitions from spoiled princess to reality-based citizen. Her family may still be packed with dysfunction, but then, whose isn't? Part of maturity is learning to deal with it, and understand that family does matter.
Sasha is a 20-something graduate of design school, a year earlier, and about all she does is party with her girlfriends and shop for expensive clothes. Her dad, much older (actor was about 80 during filming), is Chinese and runs a toy factory in a smaller Chinese town. When he calls she just ghosts him.
Then one evening faced with a $2000 tab in L. A. on her birthday with friends she is shocked to learn her credit card was no longer valid. Next day her bank accounts have been frozen. Seems dad has cut her off from her trust fund. She can't find a job and rent is due. So in spite of her grave reservations travels to China, if she will work for a year in the factory he will repay her $1Million.
So the story is actually full of surprises, her dad had been a serial philanderer, had several children with different mothers, but is wealthy. He is a hard-driving boss, he doesn't seem to be able to anything not related to the factory. The story is a growing experience for both Sasha and for her dad.
My wife and I watched it at home on Amazon streaming movies. I know many people object to what they see is the politically-incorrect depiction of work in China but hey, it is a fictional story. It didn't bother us.
Then one evening faced with a $2000 tab in L. A. on her birthday with friends she is shocked to learn her credit card was no longer valid. Next day her bank accounts have been frozen. Seems dad has cut her off from her trust fund. She can't find a job and rent is due. So in spite of her grave reservations travels to China, if she will work for a year in the factory he will repay her $1Million.
So the story is actually full of surprises, her dad had been a serial philanderer, had several children with different mothers, but is wealthy. He is a hard-driving boss, he doesn't seem to be able to anything not related to the factory. The story is a growing experience for both Sasha and for her dad.
My wife and I watched it at home on Amazon streaming movies. I know many people object to what they see is the politically-incorrect depiction of work in China but hey, it is a fictional story. It didn't bother us.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaWriter-director Emily Ting's family actually owns a toy making company.
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 35min(95 min)
- Color
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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