“Filial piety is alive and well in Asian American content.”
Read More“Atlantics depicts Islam with matter-of-factness: No explanation, no exoticization, nor hiding some of its uglier practices.”
Read MoreParasite exudes cultural specificity, with deep cuts to Korean headlines and reality TV shows.
Read More“Hustlers hits a home run with its wider allegory to capitalism in America.”
Read More“Clemency ‘shows’ rather then ‘tells’ its inclusive tenets.”
Read More“Lose yourself in this nostalgic summer retrospective, and maybe learn a thing or two about the modern history of Taiwan.”
Read More“Luce upends the Exceptional Negro trope.”
Read More“Yellow Rose deftly parallels two seemingly opposing groups: the American cowboy and the undocumented immigrant.”
Read More“Late Night spins a great message about racial diversity, but stops short at embodying it.”
Read More“It’s a joy to see Tsai Chin, who is now 85 years old, play the lead of an action-oriented gangster comedy set in New York City’s Chinatown.”
Read More“Booksmart feels baked in sexual diversity.”
Read More“The Wilsons leap over stereotypes about dark-skinned Black characters and embody another aspect of their identities—their upwards mobility.”
Read More“The Weekend feels quietly radical with its rendering of Black characters in roles we normally see reserved for the white upper middle class.”
Read More“Captain Marvel centers a white protagonist but offers significantly more fleshed-out roles for Fury and Maria that rise above sidekick status.”
Read More“What Men Want never reaches for lazy stereotypes to garner its many laughs.”
Read More“Vai amplifies Pacifika filmmaking with its slate of 9 directors, all of them indigenous women.”
Read More“The Farewell dives straight into the deep end with authentic representation, handily revealing the infinite diversity within Chinese identity alone.”
Read More“Chloé Zhao’s The Rider serves as a testament for why making the extra effort to tell underrepresented stories matters.”
Read More“The audience sees Tish and Fonny as they see each other: fully realized, at the center of their world, and as people deserving of love.”
Read More“Roma headlines an Indigenous Oaxacan woman who pierces the idea of a nebulous Latino or Hispanic identity.”
Read More