Every year, there seems to be one majorly buzzed-about film with a heavy Asian American ensemble cast. This year, Quentin Lee’s The People I’ve Slept With is it. Starring Karin Anna Cheung and a slew of other sexies including Archie Kao, Randall Park and Lynn Chen, the film revolves around one woman’s frisky ways causing her to get knocked up without knowing who the babydaddy is. This is definitely not your typical Asian American romantic comedy. Which is why you should definitely check it out…With Audrey! And Angry Asian Man!
On August 28th, Audrey Gets Angry. Seriously. Let me explain.
The People I’ve Slept With will be playing in Los Angeles at the Laemmle Sunset 5 with a cast and crew Q&A moderated by Angry Asian Man’s Phil Yu. Following that, head on over to Libertine on Sunset, where Audrey is hosting an intimate after-party with the stars of the film. Karin Anna Cheung, Lynn Chen, Archie Kao, writer Koji Steven Sakai, producer Stanley Yung and director Quentin Lee are already slated to appear.
To attend, RSVP to rsvp@audreymagazine.com. If you attend the after party, you might even get a chance to win two VIP tickets to Audrey’s Night Out 2010— the hottest fashion event for the Asian American community.
So, to sum it all up, a night to watch the hottest AA film of the year, hang with the stars and possibly win tickets to another fabulous event? This could be better than sex.
Purchase movie tickets here.
After making its way around the film festival circuit, Quentin Lee’s The People I’ve Slept With is finally coming to a theater near you. The film releases in New York tomorrow, Friday, August 13, at Clearview Chelsea Cinemas, and then in Los Angeles on August 27 at Laemmle Sunset Five Theaters, and finally in San Francisco at the VIZ CINEMAS on September 3.
The People I’ve Slept With is a sexy, romantic story about Angela (Karin Anna Cheung of Better Luck Tomorrow), a young woman with a very active and passionate sex life. After every sexual conquest she makes keepsake “baseball cards” of each of her male partners. One day, Angela finds out she is pregnant and together with her gay best friend and co-worker Gabriel (Wilson Cruz of He’s Just Not That Into You, My So-Called Life) goes on a comical and raunchy hunt through her past hook-ups and dates to find her “baby daddy.” As Angela examines her frisky past, the answers she has been looking for reveal themselves in surprising ways.
Also co-starring with Cheung and Cruz are Archie Kao (CSI: Crime Scene Investigation), Lynn Chen (Lakeview Terrace, Saving Face) and screen legend James Shigeta (Flower Drum Song, The Crimson Kimono).
The film has found strong support with sold out festival screenings including the Hawaii International Film Festival, San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival, and Outfest Fusion. It was also selected as the official Closing Night Presentation of the 2010 New York Asian American Film Festival this past July 21.
For more info, check out the website.
Janice Jann first interviewed Lynn Chen last year when White on Rice was releasing in theaters. Here, she talks to Chen about an insidious disease afflicting so many young women.
Hollywood actresses with eating disorders are a dime a dozen. The constant scrutiny under a harsh camera lens that adds 10 pounds, the competition to out-thin the other skinny minnies, the acceptance of the fact that a big part of your job revolves around how you look — and you better look good.
After a successful debut with a starring role as a ballet dancer in the 2004 romantic comedy, Saving Face, Lynn Chen’s career seemed to be taking off. But her struggle with food was spiraling down. “When I stopped the dieting, I naturally gained the weight back. But my managers weren’t happy. My fans called me chubby,” she says. After hitting an all-time low battling anorexia, Chen decided to take time off from acting and focus on her addictions. “I wanted to address that and really deal with it and not have the pressures of Hollywood knocking on my door and telling me I had to look a certain way,” she says.
So Chen and her friend, Christy, started a blog, The Actor’s Diet, in which they post what they eat every day. Serving as both a log for the two to take note of what they put in their mouths on a daily basis, as well as a way to demystify the crazy celebrity diets found in magazines and on television, the blog is a way to show readers that “actors’ diets come in all shapes and sizes,” says Chen.
“People think that actors all eat the same thing and they don’t. I think it’s important to talk about that. Especially Asian women. People say, ‘oh, Asian women, we don’t have to worry about what we eat, we’re a size zero’ and that’s just not true.”
This issue is also addressed in Chen’s contribution to Secret Identities, the anthology of Asian American superhero comics. Chen created a female superhero who is dealing with bulimia.
With scrumptious food pictures and contributions from guest bloggers like Gilmore Girls’ Keiko Agena, Chen has managed to create a blog that both entertains and informs. “I think if we can embrace that Asian women come in all shape and sizes, we struggle, we’re human, we’re not superstars, not freaks — that’s what I want to do with the blog.”
By Janice Jann.
Last Sunday, the Academy Awards honored the late, the great John Hughes. If you’re of a certain age, I’m sure you agree that no other filmmaker so acutely charted our adolescent lives than Hughes. With one glaring exception — Long Duk Dong.
[insert menacing music here]
Yes, who can forget (and not cringe) every time someone mentions Asian American actor Gedde Watanabe’s infamous role as the happily clueless and fobby foreign exchange student in Hughes’ Sixteen Candles. I have such a love-hate relationship with this movie. Love love love Molly Ringwald’s unrequited crush-love on the quintessential high school heart-throb Jake Ryan. Hate hate hate the bad stereotypes that come packaged with “The Donger.” (Sorry Gedde!).
Well “Donger,” meet “Jimmy.” Filmmaker Dave Boyle’s unlikely hero from his endearing comedy White on Rice, which just opened at New York City’s Big Cinemas Manhattan (formerly The ImaginAsian).
Jimmy makes for a nice bookend to Hughes’ Long Duk Dong — fobby, but in the best possible way. Jimmy, played with particular exuberance and heart by Japanese actor Hiroshi Watanabe (Letters from Iwo Ima), is 40 and finds himself having to share a bunk bed with his 10-year-old nephew Bob at his cousin Aiko’s house. Fresh off of a divorce, Jimmy earnestly sets out to find a new wife when he runs into his brother-in-law’s gorgeous niece Ramona (Lynn Chen of Saving Face). Sadly, Ramona has eyes for Jimmy’s way cooler coworker Tim (James Kyson Lee of “Heroes”). Jimmy wages a love war on Tim (who doesn’t seem to realize that) in an effort to win Ramona’s heart.

Dave Boyle's hilarious comedy "White on Rice" at NYC's Big Cinemas Manhattan (formerly The ImaginAsian) this weekend.
The film has won over critics both stateside and abroad in Japan. The SF Guardian says Watanabe does a “perfect job,” while Jeff Yang in a review for the San Francisco Chronicle calls the move “a cinematic milestone.”
The film is in a very limited theatrical release and only few DVD copies are available on the website. Visit White on Rice online for details. In the meantime, here’s taste:
[vimeo]http://vimeo.com/5719208[/vimeo]
With Oscar buzz galore, it’s hard to think of anything other than Avatar or red carpet dresses. But it’s also film festival season, and there are tons of indie films to keep an eye out for.
One indie film that’s getting a lot of buzz, and not just among Asian Americans, is Quentin Lee’s The People I’ve Slept With.
Yes, just as the title implies, there’s lots of sex in this daring romantic comedy. Its heroine, Angela Yang (played by Karin Anna Cheung of Better Luck Tomorrow), loves her some sex and apparently she’s not so picky about with whom. She keeps baseball cards of her conquests — with nicknames like Mystery Man, 5-Second-Guy, Mr. Hottie — to keep them straight.
For Angela, it’s a great life … that is, until she finds herself pregnant. Thus begins the journey to find the baby daddy. More photos and the trailer after the jump.
After wowing audiences with her role as a sexy lesbian in the 2004 romantic comedy, Saving Face, winning an Asian Excellence Award in 2006 for Outstanding Newcomer, Lynn Chen took some time off acting. It took another cute yet fresh romantic comedy about an Asian American family to get her back on screen. In the highly buzzed-about Dave Boyle feature, White on Rice, Chen plays Ramona, a college student who is being pursued by one very unappealing suitor: an irresponsible, middle-aged divorcee with a love of dinosaurs and geology – who also happens to be her uncle.
If the premise of White on Rice sounds quirky and a little dysfunctional, that’s because the film centers around a quirky and dysfunctional anti-hero, Jimmy (played by Letters from Iwo Jima’s Hiroshi Watanabe). Jimmy gets dumped by his wife and moves into the basement of his sister Aiko, who lives in America. Jimmy’s search for a new wife is thrown off when he sets his sights on his niece-in-law, Ramona, and tries to woo her away from his co-worker, Tim (played by Heroes’ James Kyson Lee).
“I think everyone has had someone who’s wanted to be with them that they didn’t want to be with,” says Chen, her jet black hair flirting with a smile that looks like it’s keeping a secret. “There’s this initial reaction like, ‘I don’t want to be mean to you, but this isn’t going to happen, honey.’” She laughs as she settles into an olive green couch, looking perfectly at home in the cold, formal-looking conference room. I’m sitting (slightly more uncomfortably) with Chen, the actress, singer and food blogger, as she talks about what drew her to White on Rice and more.
Audrey Magazine: Congrats for White on Rice receiving a theatrical release!
Lynn Chen: Thank you, I’m excited. With these indie films you never know what’s going to end up happening. You never know if it’ll see the light of day, if it’ll end up on DVD or not. So the fact that we’re getting a theatrical release is very exciting.
AM: What drew you to the part of Ramona?
LC: When I first read the script, I loved that there were so many parts for Asian women and they were so different from one another. I was like, “there’s one Asian woman, and another Asian woman, and another Asian woman! Wow, how great!” I liked that whoever wrote this must understand that these parts aren’t always available, so when you see an opportunity like that, you want to grab it. Of course I wanted the lead. There’s also actually a deleted scene and Tim and Ramona get to sing and I wanted to sing. I’ve been singing my entire life and I’ve never really gotten an opportunity to do that, so shooting that was really fun.
AM: You play someone who gets chased by a pretty creepy suitor. Any similar occurrences in real life?
LC: I don’t think there’s ever been any stalker-ish behavior. In Saving Face, I did have an influx of fans when the movie first came out because we were the first Asian American lesbian couple, and for a lot of lesbians this was the first time they got to reach out and talk to someone. That first flood of fan reaction didn’t freak me out, but it did freak my husband out. He was like, “Hey! What’s going on here?” But it’s really harmless.
AM: What was the shoot like?
LC: This was one of those experiences where it doesn’t happen very often. It’s like making magic. It was a very grueling shoot for me because we shot in Salt Lake City and it was 110 degrees and I didn’t sleep at all. So I was an insomniac and I got heat stroke. But the experience was still amazing – very talented cast, very talented director.
AM: What was it like working with Hiroshi?
LC: He’s a complete professional. He’s hilarious even though he doesn’t know he is.
AM: Is he similar to his character Jimmy?
LC: He is in some ways but not as extreme – he’s not an annoying person at all. He definitely stuck on his own. For example, on days off, we’d be like, “Hiroshi, come to dinner with us and he’d be like, “Nah it’s OK. I’m going to sleep and go to Red Lobster. [Laughs.] And we’d be like, “OK, you go do that. We’re not going to do that with you, but you do that.” He does his own thing and I love that.
AM: And how about working with James Kyson Lee?
LC: We never worked together [before White on Rice], we only knew of each other. It’s funny, the Asian acting community is so small and so close that we see each other all the time. So it was awesome to work with him, getting to know him and getting to see him.
AM: And what about director Dave Boyle?
LC: He’s very calm and he really makes you believe he actually delivers, that he’s capable. He makes you feel like you can screw up however you want and he won’t make you look like a fool.
AM: Would you ever want to work with Dave again?
LC: I would love to be Dave’s muse! I want to be in all his films!
White on Rice is playing now in select theatres. Check out http://whiteonricethemovie.com/theaters.html for dates and cities.
Keep up with Lynn at www.LynnChen.com.
By Janice Jann.