Egoist (c) Strand Releasing
"New York is my Personal Property and I'm gonna split it with you." I review mostly movies and New York theater shows. I am also an awards prognosticator. And a playwright.
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Tuesday, July 18, 2023
Friday, July 7, 2023
Film Reviews: In Summer Cinema: A Funny, All-Asian Sex Comedy (“Joy Ride”), an Unnecessary Trip Down Memory Lane (“Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny”) and a Sweet Coming-of-Age Journey (“Sublime”)
Joy Ride (c) Lionsgate Film
Film: Joy Ride
In Theaters
After the success of Crazy Rich Asians, it would only seem inevitable that the Asians would get their own gross out, road trip film in the style of The Hangover, Bridesmaids and Girls Trip. This formula is already set: four to five friends go on a wacky time-sensitive mission, testing the friendship of the two main characters, with a square friend who gets to experience some crazy shit and a wacky distant relative who’s a no-holds barred loose cannon. That Joy Ride, with Seth Rogen producing and Crazy Rich Asians co-writer Adele Lim directing, adheres to this formula so tightly it’s sort of a disappointment. It felt like they took a screenplay and sort of mad-lib dropped in references to Splinter the Rat, those waving Maneki-nekos cats and KPOP, added Boba Tea, stirred and voila, a hard R-rated generic comedy with an Asian twist. But the screenplay by Family Guy vets Cherry Chevapravatdumrong and Teresa Hsiao and, especially, the four talented actors elevate the material to at least gross in an Asian way, as the crew is game enough to dive deep into the drug-induced, vomit-soaked, sexually charged muck that are hallmarks of these films. Audrey (Ashley Park) and Lolo (Sherry Cola) are best friends who were the only Asian kids growing up in White Hills, Oregon. Audrey needs to close a deal with a Chinese company for work, and since she lied about speaking Chinese on her résumé (she was adopted from China by a white couple), she asks Lolo to come and help translate. Hitching a ride is Lolo’s nonbinary cousin Dead Eye (Sabrina Wu), who is socially awkward but game for anything (think Zack Galifianakis with Awkwafina’s hair style from Crazy Rich Asians), as well as Audrey’s college friend Kat (recent Oscar-nominee Stephanie Hsu), a rising soap opera actress in China who keeps up a vanilla façade for her Christian boyfriend. Also, the whole language barrier excuse is thrown out the window in China as Mandarin, Cantonese and English are used willy-nilly throughout. The joy rides these four friends get into are just one over-the-top, non-sequitur episode after another, including a drunken night at a bar, getting blackmailed into taking copious amounts of cocaine, a run-in with a hot multicultural traveling basketball team, and a KPOP-Cardi B mashup (KWAP, if you will) music video at an airport. All this is hysterically done, but the writers also try to keep some semblance of a serious plot regarding Audrey’s Asian card and if she’s deserving as it seems she seemingly rejects everything about her biological heritage. Instead of a crazy blow-out finale, the film opts for sentimental diversion for Audrey and a character played by Daniel Dae-Kim, which is a nice surprise, although it feels beamed in from another film. Still, there’s a lot of crazy fun to be had in “Joy Ride” and I look forward to more boundary-pushing humor in the eventual sequel.
Monday, July 3, 2023
Theater Reviews: Three One-Person Shows Ingratiate Themselves With Audiences Before Bringing Up Themes of Anti-Semitism (“Just for Us”), Drug Addiction (“Triple Threat”) and Indulgent Monologuists (“One Woman Show”)
One Woman Show (c) Joan Marcus