Un jeune Américain taïwanais de 13 ans découvre le patinage, le flirt et la véritable essence de l'amour maternel au-delà des enseignements de sa famille.Un jeune Américain taïwanais de 13 ans découvre le patinage, le flirt et la véritable essence de l'amour maternel au-delà des enseignements de sa famille.Un jeune Américain taïwanais de 13 ans découvre le patinage, le flirt et la véritable essence de l'amour maternel au-delà des enseignements de sa famille.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 21 victoires et 39 nominations au total
Sunil Mukherjee Maurillo
- Cory
- (as Sunil Maurillo)
Georgie August
- Georgia
- (as Dalila George August)
Avis à la une
8Taws
The slogan of this movie is "For anyone who's ever been a teenager," but I have to disagree. A more fitting slogan would be "For any Asian who's ever been a teenager in a Western country." It's classified as a "comedy-drama," but again, I disagree. The marketing makes it seem like they're trying to present Didi as a different kind of movie-maybe to attract a broader audience? Understandable, but ultimately not important. That said, there's no real "comedy" in this film; it's a drama through and through, approached with a calm and measured tone.
Visually, I really enjoyed the film. The aspect ratio and the shallow depth of field make nearly every scene stunningly appealing. The color grading is good, though I think it leans a bit too heavily on yellow tones. I also appreciated the realism of the footage captured by the small domestic camera featured in the film-it shakes naturally in every scene, just as you'd expect. Another detail I loved was Chris's room, especially his desk and computer. The production team did an excellent job of recreating those old-school GUIs, making them both authentic and visually engaging.
Now, onto the heart of this review. I deeply relate to Didi (aka the creator of this movie?) because I was just like him-growing up in nearly the same era. Watching this film stirred up long-forgotten emotions and sensations. The movie captures, with sharp realism, the struggles of adolescence as an Asian teenager in a Western country: the constant embarrassment, the internalized racism, the endless comparisons with other kids, the complexities of foreign family dynamics, the friendships, and the lies.
I don't think this movie will hit you as hard if you haven't lived through these experiences yourself. Throughout the film, I kept thinking, "This movie doesn't need a happy ending. The existence of the movie itself is the happy ending."
Watch it if you want to relive (or live) the traumatic yet formative days of being a non-white teenager during the early years of social media.
Visually, I really enjoyed the film. The aspect ratio and the shallow depth of field make nearly every scene stunningly appealing. The color grading is good, though I think it leans a bit too heavily on yellow tones. I also appreciated the realism of the footage captured by the small domestic camera featured in the film-it shakes naturally in every scene, just as you'd expect. Another detail I loved was Chris's room, especially his desk and computer. The production team did an excellent job of recreating those old-school GUIs, making them both authentic and visually engaging.
Now, onto the heart of this review. I deeply relate to Didi (aka the creator of this movie?) because I was just like him-growing up in nearly the same era. Watching this film stirred up long-forgotten emotions and sensations. The movie captures, with sharp realism, the struggles of adolescence as an Asian teenager in a Western country: the constant embarrassment, the internalized racism, the endless comparisons with other kids, the complexities of foreign family dynamics, the friendships, and the lies.
I don't think this movie will hit you as hard if you haven't lived through these experiences yourself. Throughout the film, I kept thinking, "This movie doesn't need a happy ending. The existence of the movie itself is the happy ending."
Watch it if you want to relive (or live) the traumatic yet formative days of being a non-white teenager during the early years of social media.
Watched this at the 2024 Sundance Film Festival.
Sean Wang perfectly captures the drama, cringe comedy of teenage life, and the Asian American culture with tender sweet performances, good camerawork, and fun characters to explore. Wang's direction on the humor aspects, character personalities and writing felt genuine to the setting and many of the themes on culture, friendship, growing up, and reality is well-handled with the maturity of the direction and writing.
There are uses of 2000's internet culture and media that felt strong and interesting and it is clear that Wang understands how internet culture works and how children are able to act. Because many of the child performances are good and Issac Wang is the star stealer of the entire movie, alongside with Joan Chen.
As someone who is Asian American, many of the themes, culture approaches and the characters were emotionally interesting and it felt purposeful and touching. I personally connected with the characters and what Wang was trying to tell. The humor is good as well.
Some small gripes are that I felt some of the lightening could be better in certain nighttime settings and some of the dialogue could be improved. Overall, this could have turned into a cheesy and annoying movie but with Wang's direction and writing, it becomes a thought-provoking yet tender sweet coming of age movie.
Sean Wang perfectly captures the drama, cringe comedy of teenage life, and the Asian American culture with tender sweet performances, good camerawork, and fun characters to explore. Wang's direction on the humor aspects, character personalities and writing felt genuine to the setting and many of the themes on culture, friendship, growing up, and reality is well-handled with the maturity of the direction and writing.
There are uses of 2000's internet culture and media that felt strong and interesting and it is clear that Wang understands how internet culture works and how children are able to act. Because many of the child performances are good and Issac Wang is the star stealer of the entire movie, alongside with Joan Chen.
As someone who is Asian American, many of the themes, culture approaches and the characters were emotionally interesting and it felt purposeful and touching. I personally connected with the characters and what Wang was trying to tell. The humor is good as well.
Some small gripes are that I felt some of the lightening could be better in certain nighttime settings and some of the dialogue could be improved. Overall, this could have turned into a cheesy and annoying movie but with Wang's direction and writing, it becomes a thought-provoking yet tender sweet coming of age movie.
The movie "Dìdi" is a coming-of-age story about Chris Wang, a 13-year-old Taiwanese American boy grappling with his identity and the challenge of fitting in while growing up in California in 2008. Writer and director Sean Wang captures on screen the cultural shock experienced by all children of immigrants during their adolescent years.
As someone who has been labeled a "banana" (yellow on the outside but white on the inside), I see a lot of familiarities that Didi faces when entering home and being bombarded with her family's Asian culture and when leaving home and trying to integrate with American culture. The movie feels much more authentic thanks to Izaac Wang's outstanding performance as Didi. He perfectly embodies the struggles of a young man caught between two cultures, striving to find his place and satisfy both.
As someone who has been labeled a "banana" (yellow on the outside but white on the inside), I see a lot of familiarities that Didi faces when entering home and being bombarded with her family's Asian culture and when leaving home and trying to integrate with American culture. The movie feels much more authentic thanks to Izaac Wang's outstanding performance as Didi. He perfectly embodies the struggles of a young man caught between two cultures, striving to find his place and satisfy both.
Rating: 8.7
Overall, a very good coming-of-age drama that accurately portrays the struggles of an Asian American adolescent trying to find himself, carried out by authentic, yet humorous writing and a powerful performance from Joan Chen.
Very Good Direction (The direction on a macroscale is very good as they set the area and time-period very well (2000s, Bay Area); the direction on a microscale is great as you see how the characters' emotions and relationships change in the interpersonal scenes, and this might be one of the most accurate portrayals of Asian American adolescence I have seen; the direction of actors is very good as it feels like everyone's performance is elevated; the storytelling is very good as it tells a coming-of-age story through both the Asian-American lens and the lens from someone who grew up in the 2000s), Good to Very Good Acting (Good to Very Good from Izaac Wang (Shows a wide range of emotions as you can see how he changes his personality to fit in, all while being incredibly anxious/feeling lost), Very Good to Great from Joan Chen (Delivers a very powerful performance as the matriarch in the family as she tries her best to hold the family together while also trying to pursue her own passions; her final monologue is truly Oscar worthy as it comes second to Ellen Burstyn's Red Dress monologue in how emotional and well executed it is), Good from the rest of the cast (Really emulates the time-period and adolescence)), Good to Very Good Story (The concept is simple and self-explanatory as it is an Asian-American, coming-of-age story set in 2000s Fremont; the plot structure is pretty simple (short and to the point); flow between sequences is very good; the character writing is great as you really get a grasp of what each character in the family is going through (especially the protagonist and the mother)), Great Screenplay (The dialogue is great as it mimics the time-period/location/age of the characters; the Cantonese dialogue is used very well as it helps show the identity of the family and show this dichotomy of being an Asian American in that time-period; the emotional dialogue is very powerful as it invokes a lot of strong emotions in both the cast and the audience; the humor is very true to the time and well written; the symbolism is very powerful as it realistically shows Asian-American Identity and adolescence; the foreshadowing is pretty standard for a coming-of-age story), Pretty Good to Good Score (Helps with establishing the tone, especially in the more depressing scenes), Good Cinematography (Enjoyed the how they interweaved 2000s camcorder shots in with the standard shots, and I felt the more large scale shots did a good job at showing the emotions of the characters (especially the protagonist)), Very Good Editing (Feels very polished and interjects the message/social-media scenes very well), , Pretty Bad Visual Effects (Feels pretty tacky and out of place), Good Production Design (Did a good job in emulating 2000s Fremont, CA), Pacing is pretty fast as it tries to go through a decent amount in its short runtime (but there really could not have been any more runtime that could've been added), Climax is executed very well as it is the epiphany/lowest for the protagonist and displays an incredible monologue from the mother (showing her identity in relation to her family and personal ambitions), Tone feels like a coming-of-age movie set in 2000s Bay Area (and executes this very well), Saw the Texas Premiere at SXSW.
Very Good Direction (The direction on a macroscale is very good as they set the area and time-period very well (2000s, Bay Area); the direction on a microscale is great as you see how the characters' emotions and relationships change in the interpersonal scenes, and this might be one of the most accurate portrayals of Asian American adolescence I have seen; the direction of actors is very good as it feels like everyone's performance is elevated; the storytelling is very good as it tells a coming-of-age story through both the Asian-American lens and the lens from someone who grew up in the 2000s), Good to Very Good Acting (Good to Very Good from Izaac Wang (Shows a wide range of emotions as you can see how he changes his personality to fit in, all while being incredibly anxious/feeling lost), Very Good to Great from Joan Chen (Delivers a very powerful performance as the matriarch in the family as she tries her best to hold the family together while also trying to pursue her own passions; her final monologue is truly Oscar worthy as it comes second to Ellen Burstyn's Red Dress monologue in how emotional and well executed it is), Good from the rest of the cast (Really emulates the time-period and adolescence)), Good to Very Good Story (The concept is simple and self-explanatory as it is an Asian-American, coming-of-age story set in 2000s Fremont; the plot structure is pretty simple (short and to the point); flow between sequences is very good; the character writing is great as you really get a grasp of what each character in the family is going through (especially the protagonist and the mother)), Great Screenplay (The dialogue is great as it mimics the time-period/location/age of the characters; the Cantonese dialogue is used very well as it helps show the identity of the family and show this dichotomy of being an Asian American in that time-period; the emotional dialogue is very powerful as it invokes a lot of strong emotions in both the cast and the audience; the humor is very true to the time and well written; the symbolism is very powerful as it realistically shows Asian-American Identity and adolescence; the foreshadowing is pretty standard for a coming-of-age story), Pretty Good to Good Score (Helps with establishing the tone, especially in the more depressing scenes), Good Cinematography (Enjoyed the how they interweaved 2000s camcorder shots in with the standard shots, and I felt the more large scale shots did a good job at showing the emotions of the characters (especially the protagonist)), Very Good Editing (Feels very polished and interjects the message/social-media scenes very well), , Pretty Bad Visual Effects (Feels pretty tacky and out of place), Good Production Design (Did a good job in emulating 2000s Fremont, CA), Pacing is pretty fast as it tries to go through a decent amount in its short runtime (but there really could not have been any more runtime that could've been added), Climax is executed very well as it is the epiphany/lowest for the protagonist and displays an incredible monologue from the mother (showing her identity in relation to her family and personal ambitions), Tone feels like a coming-of-age movie set in 2000s Bay Area (and executes this very well), Saw the Texas Premiere at SXSW.
I am not Asian. I did not grow up in the 2000s. And yet, I absolutely related to this film and its protagonist. Because we've all navigated that awkward in between stage. Friendships change and feelings get hurt and moments feel way bigger than they actually are. Sean Wang managed to tell a story that evokes a particular moment and is timeless all at once. It helps that his actors (especially Izaac Wang and Joan Chen) feel familiar and real. Throughout this story I could feel the cringes and the hugs...and I could hear the inner monologues too. I have no desire to go back to being a freshman in high school, but if I did? It would look and feel a lot like this.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesZhang Li Hua, the actress who plays grandma Nai Nai, is director Sean Wang's real-life grandmother. She had previously co-starred in Wang's Academy Award-nominated documentary short Nai Nai & Wài Pó (2023).
- GaffesOne of the Paramore posters in Vivian's room features a logo with three slashes for the E in "Paramore", which the band didn't start using until 2013. The film takes place in 2008.
- Citations
Vivian Wang: [Bursts into Chris' room, grabs him by the neck] If you ever pee in my bottle of lotion again, I'm gonna period in your mouth when you're asleep.
Chris Wang: [Yells] Mom!
- ConnexionsFeatured in Horrible Reviews: Best Movies I've Seen In 2024 (2025)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langues
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Dìdi
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 4 839 360 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 207 307 $US
- 28 juil. 2024
- Montant brut mondial
- 5 156 153 $US
- Durée1 heure 33 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1
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