Fast reviews for busy people! Watch as I review three movies in less time than it takes to do a high five! Have a look as I race against the clock to tell you about the genre defying “Sinners,” the immersive documentary “One to One: John & Yoko” and the rom dramedy “The Wedding Banquet.”
I join CTV NewsChannel anchor Scott Hirsch to talk about the genre defying “Sinners,” the immersive documentary “One to One: John & Yoko” and the rom dramedy “The Wedding Banquet.”
I join “CTV News Toronto at Five” with guest anchor Zuraidah Alman to talk about new movies in theatres including the genre defying “Sinners,” the immersive documentary “One to One: John & Yoko” and the rom dramedy “The Wedding Banquet.”
I sit in on the CFRA Ottawa morning show with host Bill Carroll to talk about the new movies coming to theatres including the genre defying “Sinners,” the immersive documentary “One to One: John & Yoko” and the rom dramedy “The Wedding Banquet.”
SYNOPSIS: In “The Wedding Baquet,” a new romantic dramedy starring Bowen Yang and Lily Gladstone, and now playing in theatres, two couples come up with an unusual arrangement. Lee (Lily Gladstone) and Angela (Kelly Marie Tran) are trying to have a baby but can’t afford another round of IVF treatment. Their landlords, Min (Han Gi-chan), whose student visa is set to expire, and Chris (Bowen Yang), his commitment-phobe boyfriend, are having a rocky patch. Min wants to get married, but Chris is hesitant. In exchange for the money for more IVF Angela agrees to a marriage of convenience with Min, who’ll then get his Green Card. The plan is complicated when Min’s rich grandmother (“Minari” Oscar-winner Youn Yuh-jung), who doesn’t know Min is gay, unexpectedly arrives for a visit. “If my grandmother thinks your marrying me for money,” Moin says, “she’ll blow the whole thing up.”
CAST: Bowen Yang, Lily Gladstone, Kelly Marie Tran, Han Gi-chan, Joan Chen, Youn Yuh-jung. Directed by Andrew Ahn who co-wrote the script with James Schamus.
REVIEW: A modern update of Ang Lee’s 1993 Oscar-nominated film of the same name, the new movie features all the standard rom com flourishes. There’s the usual miscommunications, physical comedy and romantic antics but they are tempered by emotion that elevates “The Wedding Banquet” from rom com to, if not drama, at least a low-key dramedy, heavy on the poignant moments.
The tonal switches are made believable by a talented cast. The scenes between Lee and Angela, Lily Gladstone and Kelly Marie Tran, have a warm, lived-in feel that reveals their deep connection. Ditto the connection between Angela and her mother (Joan Chen). It’s a shame we don’t get more scenes of the dynamic between mother and daughter.
Best of all is a late movie scene between Min and his grandmother, played by Youn Yuh-jung. Youn brings warmth, humour and understanding to a scene that could easily have slipped into melodrama.
“The Wedding Banquet” nicely updates the original’s (which Schamus co-wrote) take on the modern vs. the traditional and does so with a great deal of heart. It winds up with a rushed ending, but rom coms, even ones with a serious edge, are never about the destination. We know how these movies will end. They’re about the journey and “The Wedding Banquet” is a fun ride.
Author Jane Austen passed away, age 41, in 1817 but her influence has proven to be timeless. Her novels, literary studies in parody, burlesque and irony mixed with social commentary, have enjoyed second lives in everything from “Clueless,” an update of “Emma” set in Beverly Hills, and the self-explanatory “Pride and Prejudice and Zombies.”
Add to the list, just in time for Pride Month, “Fire Island,” a new LGBTQ2+ romantic comedy on Disney+, based on Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice.”
Joel Kim Booster stars as Noah, part of a twentysomething group of friends who gather every year for a week of mixing and mingling at a Fire Island house owned by their friend and den mother Erin (Margaret Cho). It is a tradition and a sacred “gay Disney World” weekend for bookworm Max (Torian Miller), pleasure seekers Luke (Matt Rogers) and Keegan (Tomas Matos) and Noah’s best friend Howie (“Saturday Night Live’s” Bowen Yang) who now lives in San Francisco but makes the trip every year.
Determined to arrange a love match, or at least a hook-up, for the insecure Howie, Noah is on the look-out for eligible men.
Enter the “prejudice” part of the story, the Mr. Darcy character, Will (Conrad Ricamora). He’s a snobby, wealthy man visiting the island with a gaggle of his lawyerin’ and doctorin’ friends. Will’s friend Charlie (James Scully) and Howie hit it off, but will Noah and Will be able to overcome their differences and become friends?
Originally created as a series on the now-defunct Quibi service, “Fire Island” has expanded to feature length with its exploration (by way of Austen) of class and status intact. Booster, who stars and wrote the script, transposes Austen’s corsets and petticoats for Speedos and wild drug and booze fueled parties but maintains the source material’s study of overcoming obstacles for true love, class status and, especially in reference to Noah’s clique, the strength of a family network. The bond between the guys is at is the heart of this R-rated movie and helps anchor the raunchier and lighter “Legally Blonde” moments.
Director Andrew Ahn keeps up the pace, and makes Fire Island look like a million-dollar getaway. That glossy style, combined with Austen’s sensibility, adds up to an entertaining comedy of manners; lightweight, but celebratory.