Una joven que trabaja como anfitriona de karaoke en Koreatown se reencuentra con su hermano separado en los últimos días de la vida de su padre.Una joven que trabaja como anfitriona de karaoke en Koreatown se reencuentra con su hermano separado en los últimos días de la vida de su padre.Una joven que trabaja como anfitriona de karaoke en Koreatown se reencuentra con su hermano separado en los últimos días de la vida de su padre.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Premios
- 3 premios ganados y 2 nominaciones en total
Octavio Pisano
- Octavio
- (as Octavio Pizano)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
This film really has some standout and profound moments, exploring familial dynamics, death, and autonomy. Crystal Lee's acting is really stellar and the film is very beautiful. There is even some very nice humor thrown in to lighten the intense themes of the movie. However, there was some questionable writing and dialogue that felt like it threw off the tone of the movie, at times. Overall a very solid picture that explores some very important topics.
Subtlety is not a strong suit in Justin Chon's movie, with striking shots, amplified music and jarring flashbacks taking precedence over story and characterizatons. Key information is denied to the viewer (e.g., purple is the color of mourning in Korean culture) and the use of 3 or 4 false endings (extra footage is shown even after the end credits roll) is a drag.
Chon covers a number of weighty themes, unfortunately often trivializing them. His heroine suffered (along with her brother) from abandonment, as their mother left them, and is clinging to her dying father as a result, refusing to give him over to hospice care as nearly everyone suggests she do. The extreme difficulties of a caregiver are illustrated, but make for black humor comic relief (the brother wheeling comatose dad in his bed through traffic repeatedly as silly music plays).
His depiction of the plight of a sex worker, as our suffering heroine is mired in prostitution working in karaoke bars that are merely fronts for sex, and her even more disturbing treatment by an egotistical sugar daddy is commendable in how her humiliation is shown to be even more debilitating to the human spirit than the sex and ultimate violence that comes with the territory.
Chon also uses two subcultures, the Korean community and Chicano community, to portray immigrants as strangers in a strange land, seemingly his principal theme in the picture. More back story would be necessary to give this set of characters three dimensions, and the subpar acting in the brother's role is a major drawback to becoming involved or invested in their fates.
Chon covers a number of weighty themes, unfortunately often trivializing them. His heroine suffered (along with her brother) from abandonment, as their mother left them, and is clinging to her dying father as a result, refusing to give him over to hospice care as nearly everyone suggests she do. The extreme difficulties of a caregiver are illustrated, but make for black humor comic relief (the brother wheeling comatose dad in his bed through traffic repeatedly as silly music plays).
His depiction of the plight of a sex worker, as our suffering heroine is mired in prostitution working in karaoke bars that are merely fronts for sex, and her even more disturbing treatment by an egotistical sugar daddy is commendable in how her humiliation is shown to be even more debilitating to the human spirit than the sex and ultimate violence that comes with the territory.
Chon also uses two subcultures, the Korean community and Chicano community, to portray immigrants as strangers in a strange land, seemingly his principal theme in the picture. More back story would be necessary to give this set of characters three dimensions, and the subpar acting in the brother's role is a major drawback to becoming involved or invested in their fates.
Yes, sad, but so realistic and natural. Tiffany Chu is incredible to watch, every minute of it. It breaks one's heart to see what she goes through. One of my best movies this year. I also enjoyed the music.
This is a slow moving drama, but it is beautiful both aesthetically and plot wise. I find it engaging.
The writing, directing, and cinematography are fantastic with a beautiful score as the cherry on top, but the acting can be lackluster at points bringing the over all experience down. The acting is good at parts, sometimes great, but when everything else is at it's a game, the acting sticks out like a sore thumb. Over all, really well executed. I do recommend.
¿Sabías que…?
- ConexionesReferenced in Imperfectos (2023)
- Bandas sonorasI'm Gonna Be (500 Miles)
Written by Charlie Reid (as Charles Reid) and Craig Reid
Performed by The Proclaimers
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- How long is Ms. Purple?Con tecnología de Alexa
Detalles
Taquilla
- Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 80,657
- Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
- USD 15,734
- 8 sep 2019
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 80,657
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 27min(87 min)
- Color
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