Teen artist Angie Chen turns to secret hook-ups with the heartthrob of her private school after her parents' sudden divorce.Teen artist Angie Chen turns to secret hook-ups with the heartthrob of her private school after her parents' sudden divorce.Teen artist Angie Chen turns to secret hook-ups with the heartthrob of her private school after her parents' sudden divorce.
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An Asian lead who is allowed to be flawed, allowed to be fully human, and still deal with very real Chinese-American experiences. It feels good to see this type of character being able to have a social plot with their peers without just being a Chinese-American but just being human; it was the type of drama you could see the typical (white) American actor in but with more layers due to additionally being in between cultures. This is very clearly not Hollywood, but even then it doesn't feel like cutting this film slack by mentioning how stunning the camera work is and how genuine the script felt, even with the awkward moments feeling like actual teenage moments. All in all, it is a great coming-of-age film that truly fulfills its role as a form of our representation as fully fleshed-out humans!
Cinematography was great, acting was great, and the story made me feel like I was back in high school. Don't know if that's a good thing, but it's definitely worth a watch!
From the very first moment, I feel like Angie is someone I know intimately. Emma Galbraith's performance is stunning and heartfelt (and funny!). I really hope to see her in more complex roles like this.
Director Mei Makino has created something phenomenal and unforgettable.
These are the teenagers I want to see in movies! Characters who are real and flawed - and dealing with problems so many understand. Angie is someone you root for the entire film without them stripping her of her ability to make mistakes. No blank-canvas characters or too-perfect "strong females" in this movie.
Beautifully shot in a location that makes Angie's personality feel even more three-dimensional. The colors and style of the film bring her (and the people around her) to life.
No spoilers here - but the way this film deals with teenage relationships is something I've never seen on screen. The writing mixes the magic of first love with the grounded realism that makes viewers feel seen and understood.
I would (and will!) recommend this to anyone who wants to feel like their struggle to find themselves is normal, and that they can work through it. Beautiful, beautiful story.
Director Mei Makino has created something phenomenal and unforgettable.
These are the teenagers I want to see in movies! Characters who are real and flawed - and dealing with problems so many understand. Angie is someone you root for the entire film without them stripping her of her ability to make mistakes. No blank-canvas characters or too-perfect "strong females" in this movie.
Beautifully shot in a location that makes Angie's personality feel even more three-dimensional. The colors and style of the film bring her (and the people around her) to life.
No spoilers here - but the way this film deals with teenage relationships is something I've never seen on screen. The writing mixes the magic of first love with the grounded realism that makes viewers feel seen and understood.
I would (and will!) recommend this to anyone who wants to feel like their struggle to find themselves is normal, and that they can work through it. Beautiful, beautiful story.
This beautiful and intimate movie focuses on Asian-American teenager Angie, a budding artist and independent thinker, who has her first sexual experiences on the down-low with Liam, the "it" boy of their small private school. Liam is involved with the beautiful Social Media influencer "it" girl, Sheryl, and though they appear to be a perfect couple, she won't 'go all-the-way' with Liam, which has him roving elsewhere. While this sounds like it could produce a redux one-dimensional tale of a teen-triangle, the performances are complex, authentic and wonderfully rendered by Emma Galbraith as Angie, William Magnuson as Liam and Emily Garrett as Sheryl. They bring a depth to their performances that made me feel the complexity of what it feels like to be chosen and alternately ignored, wanted and rejected, seen and unseen. These relationships play out against the backdrop of Angie's parents getting divorced, and Angie's father moving on with a Chinese woman and her 'more' Asian daughter. The convoluted territory of biracial relationships, multidimensional people and flawed but loving human beings is steered masterfully by Mei Makino, the writer/director. The movie is set in Galveston TX, which presents a very quaint / 'white' backdrop for the story to pop. I HIGHLY recommend this movie. I must also give a shoutout to the artist who rendered Angie's drawings - Larissa Akhmetova. They are imaginative and add great insight to Angie's passion and emotions. A gem of a movie -- and it's getting great reviews (NY Times Critic's pic, npr interview, SXSW and Caamfest winner). Worth it.
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This was honestly such a good movie! I really don't know why people don't like it, but it has such great representation. Emma Galbraith in particular really expressed her role as the lead really well. You can really feel the emotion that is going on and ugh, it's just amazing. The characters are well draw out and individual, each with his own personality. The Acting throughout is very good as well. Everyone did a wonderful job!!!
Did you know
- Quotes
Angie Chen: You know how in movies and TV when women have sex they're always moaning in ecstasy because they're so unbelievably pleasured? Last night, I only moaned in pain. Is there something wrong with me, or my body?
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Details
- Runtime1 hour 29 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.9:1
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