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Well, I must be missing something if this is the best picture.
EEAAO was so moving my gf watched it twice just weeks apart. It's now one of her favorite films ever. I loved it but then again Michelle Yeoh was a fixture of my youth when I first got into martial arts/HK action films (hence my profile name); same for Ke Huy Quan and my love of Spielberg (Temple of Doom, Goonies). Same w/ James Wong (Big Trouble In Little China also one of my personal faves) and Jamie Lee Curtis.The film is ultimately about family and healing generational trauma - especially between mothers and daughters, and probably some other layers that may or may not be obvious. Probably not the most accessible film for the audiophile demographic.It's one of the most original films to break through in ages and the Oscars were well deserved.
Well, I went ahead and finished it.It's like the SyFy and Lifetime networks joined forces to film a heavily contrived remake of It's a Wonderful Life. The movie is like a soap bubble: many swirling, frenetic colors on the surface but hollow inside. It doesn't handle its core themes with originality, subtlety, or depth. If the surface doesn't sufficiently distract the viewer, then the empty substance inside becomes apparent.Stephanie Hsu was the best of the actors, but there was only a little to work with in the script. I liked her in The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel as well.
I liked it as a free watch on whatever streaming service I watched it on, but Oscar winner, no way. I was really upset Tar was ignored. I think it was a case of virtue signaling to award asian actors, who have been shamefully ignored in the past. I'm okay with that as this was a good opportunity to right that wrong, but Best Picture? It's a bad joke.
And maybe when Parasite won they were virtue signaling to Korean Americans. Because, you know, when something wins that I don't like, virtue signaling is always the underlying reason. /sarcasm