Penticton Herald

Movie review: ‘Crazy Rich Asians’ delightful fairy tale

- By JAKE COYLE

There are two glittering parades running in tandem through Jon M. Chu’s “Crazy Rich Asians,” a glitzy and delightful adaptation of Kevin Kwan’s 2013 bestseller. One is the blingedout, designer-label, crazy-rich opulence often characteri­stic of rom-coms yet extreme enough here to make even Carrie Bradshaw or Christian Grey blush.

The other, and far more arresting pageant, is of the film’s Asian cast of various nationalit­ies who, one after another, shame Hollywood’s regular disinteres­t in them by being so effortless­ly dazzling.

The result is a totally winning confection: a frothy fairy tale, trivial and weighty at once, that simultaneo­usly uses tried-and-true romantic comedy convention while riotously bursting free of movie-business formula. “Crazy Rich Asians” has much of the same DNA as a host of princess tales like “Cinderella,” but it is a radical departure, too.

Chu’s film is the first contempora­ry-set studio film centred on an all-Asian and AsianAmeri­can cast in 25 years, following Wayne Wang’s 1993 adaptation of Amy Tan’s “The Joy Luck Club.” Further, studies have shown that less than 5 per cent of the most popular movies in North America last year even featured a speaking character of Asian descent. Movies like this, to everyone’s loss, almost never come along.

“Crazy Rich Asians” would still be an important film even if it understand­ably sagged with such history on its shoulders. And it’s not perfect. Like rom-coms before it, it has a blatantly superficia­l side, so drowning in the accoutreme­nts of high-society Singapore that it conflates materialis­m with matrimony. (There is a wedding set in a church transforme­d into a lily pond and a bachelor party on a cargo ship anchored in internatio­nal waters.) And some could reasonably quibble that Chu’s film has blind spots of its own, omitting South and Southeaste­rn Asians for a tale entirely focused on Chinese and Chinese-American characters.

But it’s not for “Crazy Rich Asians” to single-handedly make up for all the studio movies that have been missing for the last 25 years. And thanks largely to its energetic ensemble, led by Constance Wu and Henry Golding, Chu’s film is a charming romp, full of heart and heartening breakout stars.

Wu plays Rachel Chu, an economics professor at New York University whose Singapore-born businessma­n boyfriend Nick Young (Golding) suggests a trip to the Far East. “Like Queens?” she replies over dinner in Manhattan. But his proposal is that they fly back to Singapore for his best friend’s wedding and to meet his family. It’s only as they are boarding the airplane and are led to an entire bedroom suite that Rachel realizes her long-term boyfriend is filthy, stinking rich.

“We’re comfortabl­e,” he says, a phrasing Rachel immediatel­y recognizes as “exactly what a super-rich person would say.” Once they arrive in Singapore, it gradually dawns on Rachel that she’s on the cusp of marrying into one of Asia’s wealthiest real-estate empires. Young is the princely heir of the family business, which he has temporaril­y fled but is still expected to soon takeover.

Running time: 121 minutes.

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 ?? — The Associaste­d Press ?? This Warner Bros. Entertainm­ent image shows Nico Santos, left, and Michelle Yeoh in a scene from the film “Crazy Rich Asians.”
— The Associaste­d Press This Warner Bros. Entertainm­ent image shows Nico Santos, left, and Michelle Yeoh in a scene from the film “Crazy Rich Asians.”

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