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IMPORTANT & NOTEWORTHY FILMS
FEATURING ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICANS

Films in 1993 (Part 3)
Click HERE for Part 1 and HERE for Part 2


Click HERE to see if the film, Rising Sun, is accurate?  Send us your comments.  Please be aware that many in the APA communities feel that this film is very derogatory!

RISING SUN
(1993)

Directed by Phillip Kaufman
Executive Producer: Sean Connery
Cast: Sean Connery, Wesley Snipes, Harvey Keitel, Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, Kevin Anderson, Mako, Ray Wise, Stan Egi, Stan Shaw, Tia Carrere, Lauren Robinson, Amy Hill, Clyde Kusatsu, Michael Chapman, Joey Miyashima, Nelson Mashita, Tamara Tunie, Toshirô Obata, Tylyn John, Michele Ruiz, Patricia Ayame Thomson, Jeff Imada, Max Kirishima, Larry O. Williams Jr., Scot Anthony Robinson, Meagen Fay, Max Grodénchik, Jessica Tuck, Masa Watanabe, Paul Fujimoto, Kenji, Tak Kubota, Tadashi Yamashita, Dennis Ota, Raymond Kitamura, Rita Weibel, Susan Iida, Seiichi Tanaka

This movie is "noteworthy" for the strong opinions, both pro and con, it has solicited on the merits of this movie! Many Asian American organizations strongly disapprove of the movie, while the response in Asia was vastly different. The reason why this movie is included is because a major movie took a chance with a plot with an Asian-theme, though misguided in many areas.

"Rising Son" displays the more steamy and secret side of life within the Japanese community that gets the typical movie treatment where they accent the bad (as the pattern of Hollywood and Michael Crichton for a long time) The story is about L.A. cop (Wesley Snipes) and Japan expert (Sean Connery) investigating a homicide case that implicates a powerful Japanese corporation and a U. S. senator. Stripped-down version of Michael Crichton's detailed and controversial novel (adapted by Crichton and director Kaufman) is alternately compelling, confusing, obvious, and silly, with credibility strained to the breaking point toward the end of the picture. The picture displays the talents of many talented Asian / Asian Pacific Americans that included Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, Tia Carriere, Mako, Jeff Imada and many others.

It is hard to imagine Sean Connery, Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa, Stan Egi, Jeff Imada and others involve in a film that deserves at least a little credit - albeit not much, but at least a little credit. It is more disappointing because the opportunity to have a great movie existed. But hey, it was written from a white guy's (Crichton) perspective with a white director with white stars!

Listed below are some issues and complaints to think about:

  • Many people complain that "Rising Sun" fits firmly into the tradition of the "yellow peril" potboiler: It assumes that anyone Asian is "foreign" and suspicious - hey, from a white guy's perspective, this is the sad truth. One problem is that there are so few films regarding Asian / Asian Pacific Americans that there is a very limited chance of displaying more than one side of a community. This is the same problem occurred within the Italian community (i.e. all Italians are part of the Mafia), Black community (i.e. all Blacks are part of a gang), etc.

  • Another complaint is that all of the bad guys and murder suspects in "Rising Sun" fall into these categories: (1) Japanese (Eddie Sakamura, Ishihara, the gangsters, etc.), (2) Working for the Japanese (Richmond, The Weasel, Eddie's bodyguards, the L.A.P.D.) or (3) Blackmailed by the Japanese (Tom Graham, Senator Morton).

  • People have complained about Tia Carrere's character only talking how unjust and oppressive the Japanese are without putting up any fight. She doesn't have a love interest in anybody Asian.

  • The movie illustrated the white community's greatest fear - a Japanese company engaging in murder, spying, and coercion. People complain that they don't see any MicroCon personnel engaging in such practices - though a white senator was identified.

  • People have complain that Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa's character was the typical self-sacrificial Asian sidekick who sacrifices his life so that the non-Asian hero(es) can live.

  • People have complained that though the two lead characters have personal imperfections, this has been seen as part of their "humanity" which many complained didn't happened with the Japanese villains.

  • Many people asks why is it that Hollywood always insists on making White people (in this case, Sean Connery) its "experts" on Asian cultures? Don't Asian people know anything about themselves? One sad conclusion is that why would the white community ask somebody from the community that they fear for advice? The other, sad but true, financial reason is that who from the Asian/Asian Pacific American communities could play that part that is a draw? Just as the Black and Italian communities developed their stars, the situation started to change - slowly but surely.

If you are undecided, purchase the film and let us know!?! Be aware that important groups such as MANAA strongly disapprove the film. Click HERE to purchase the film

COMBINATION PLATTER
(1993)

Directed by Tony Chan
Cast: Lester Chit-Man Chan, James DuMont, Thomas K. Hsiung, Jeffrey Lau, Kenneth Lu, Colin Mitchell, Coleen O'Brien, Susan Sterman

A young illegal immigrant from Hong Kong (Lau) toils in a Queens, N. Y. , Chinese restaurant, and covets U. S. citizenship--but learns that this may mean having to marry an American, the thought of which staggers him. Hong Kong-born director-cowriter Chan, himself an immigrant, knowingly captures the experience of the foreigner in America. This marks the 23-year-old's directing debut. Click HERE to purchase the film

BOUND
(1993)

Directed by Andy Wachowski & Larry Wachowski
Cast: Jennifer Tilly, Gina Gershon, Joe Pantoliano, John P. Ryan, Christopher Meloni, etc.

Corky (Gina Gershon), a tough female ex con and her lover Violet (Jennifer Tilly) concoct a scheme to steal millions of stashed mob money and pin the blame on Violet's crooked boyfriend Caeser (Joe Pantoliano). Corky, a lesbian ex con hired to work in an apartment as a plumber, meets neighbors Caesar, who launders money for the Mafia, and his girlfriend Violet. The two women have a love affair and decide to steal $2,000,000 that Caesar has in custody before he gives them back to Mafia boss Gino Marzone. Caesar is set up by the two scheming women as a scapegoat but things start to go wrong when he reacts in an unexpected way.

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