The film is simultaneously sweet natured and sharply observed, and if love eventually conquers all, it takes its own sweet time doing it.
Saving Face (2005)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:79
Fresh:68
Rotten:11
Average Rating:6.6/10
Consensus: A charming tale of a love affair that overcomes cultural taboos.
Runtime: 1 hr 38 mins
Genre: Romance
US Box Office: $1,000,385
Synopsis: Saving Face is the charming story of a young woman's complicated life and her pursuit of love amid the chaos. Wil (Michelle Krusiec) is a 28-year-old overworked medical resident living in Manhattan... Saving Face is the charming story of a young woman's complicated life and her pursuit of love amid the chaos. Wil (Michelle Krusiec) is a 28-year-old overworked medical resident living in Manhattan with no social life. Her widowed mother, Ma (Joan Chen), cannot understand why her desirable daughter spends all her time at work. Ma, meanwhile, appears to be a traditional Chinese-American woman still under the thumb of her ultra-strict father. That Wil and her mother are both products of the very insular, traditional (and, yes…gossipy) Chinese-American community in Flushing, Queens makes the usual family ties even tighter. At a social function in the old neighborhood, one in which her mother insists Wil attend in search of a husband, Wil spots a beautiful young woman named Vivian (Lynn Chen), who returns her gaze. Shortly after, Wil and Vivian's paths cross again in the city. It turns out Vivian's father is Wil's boss at the hospital. A dancer taking time off to teach children, Vivian is instantly smitten with Wil and wants to help her relax and enjoy life a little more. Wil is equally smitten and soon is stealing whatever moments she can away from the hospital to meet Vivian for dates all over the city…except Queens. Wil shares the excitement of her new relationship with her friends but, for all her closeness with her mother, Wil has never come out. Thankfully, Manhattan and Flushing, Queens couldn't be further apart…that is until Wil returns home one night to find her Ma on her doorstep. Like Wil, Ma has been living a secret love life and is now pregnant and unwed, which is not acceptable in this tight knit community. Refusing to name the father, Ma has been kicked out and will have to live with Wil. Used to an independence that comes with living outside of the community, Wil now has to cope with introducing Vivian into her Ma's world. Anyone who's ever experienced the flush of love and the desire to keep it your own, without having to analyze or explain it, for as long as possible, will enjoy this multi-generational story of family, love, lust, romance, gossip and secrets within secrets. A true love letter to New York City, SAVING FACE is told with a great deal of warmth and humor, as everyone tries to sort out their emotions and fulfill their obligations…to themselves and to each other, while all along acknowledging their not-so-secret lives and trying to "save face." -- © Sony Pictures Classics [More]
Starring: Michelle Krusiec, Joan Chen, Jin Wang, Lynn Chen
Starring: Michelle Krusiec, Joan Chen, Jin Wang, Lynn Chen, Guang Lan Koh, Jessica Hecht, Ato Essandoh, David Shih
Director: Alice Wu
Director: Alice Wu
Screenwriter: Alice Wu
Producer: John Penotti, Robin O'Hara, James Lassiter, Will Smith
Composer: Anton Sanko
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
Reviews for Saving Face
Wu, who wrote and directed the movie, has put together an enjoyable film that combines elements of the romantic-comedy and Asian-American generational conflict saga to nice effect.
A heartwarming comedy that reaffirms the power of personal choice, while also promising to love and to cherish even the most hidebound cultures.
Tender and often extremely funny, Alice Wu's delightful debut feature, Saving Face, is a Chinese-American lesbian romance that wisely explores the tug-of-war between tradition and the need to be true to one's heart.
Saving Face is nonetheless a heartfelt and witty film that favorably compares to Ang Lee's The Wedding Banquet, even if Wu lacks Lee's subtlety and wraps everything up a little too neatly.
It's like the movie version of a fortune cookie - nothing too provocative (or too profound), but it's cute light entertainment.
This multi-generational culture clash has some charm and gentle humor, but where Face falls on its, um, face is in the lethargic pacing, inconsistent acting and unexplored relationships.
A hugely charismatic performance from a glowing Joan Chen makes this cliched little comedy seem a whole lot fresher than it really is.
Alice Wu's debut film is so deft, natural and exquisitely specific, it feels fresh.
Alice Wu's amiable romantic comedy examines the lives of three generations of Chinese-Americans living in New York.
A mother and daughter face romantic complications at the same time in New York City's busy Chinese-American community. Nicely acted.
Enlivened throughout by the director's ability to document her native community's unique quirks without ever quite falling into Greek Wedding grotesquery.
Alice Wu's imperfect romantic comedy completely wins you over by the end.
This film breaks the icy barriers of traditional repression, cold communication. Offers up a series of sometimes charming scenes, but seldom breaks deeper into the surface.
Despite a fairly explicit lesbian boobfest (projected attendance just went up!), the film is more good-natured than provocative.
Latest News for Saving Face
October 05, 2005:
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