Hastings Leader

Heartfelt story about love

Netflix drama recalls immigrant experience of Taiwanese-American family

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Tigertail comes off more as an idea of an arthouse movie than one propelled by its own volition.

TIGERTAIL Cast: Tzi Ma, Joan Chen, Hayden Szeto Director: Alan Yang Running time: 91 minutes Streaming: Netflix ★★★

Oh, to be the other “Tiger” on Netflix.

Alan Yang’s Tigertail is either blessed to arrive in the stormy wake of Tiger King, or doomed to be the other Tiger title Netflix users accidental­ly select when they’re looking for the tabloid story of a zoo owner, not a patient and personal immigrant tale.

Yang’s film, he has said, sprang from both the upbringing of his Taiwanese father and his own imaginatio­n. It’s a gentle and pensive intergener­ational story about love and leaving home, about how an immigrant father’s experience­s might not be as distant from his firstgener­ation daughter’s as he imagines.

Tigertail is the directoria­l debut of Yang, a writer-producer on Parks &

Recreation and a co-creator of Master

of None. On the latter, with Aziz Ansari, Yang often stretched sitcomlike comedy in unpredicta­ble arthouse directions.

In Tigertail, he has dispensed with the comic set-up and gone straight for the arthouse, striving for the kind of lyricism of Wong Kar-wai or the elliptical beauty of Hou Hsiao-Hsien. Yang’s film, heartfelt but inert, only briefly touches on anything like the work of those filmmakers. But it’s an earnest stab at a drifting kind of memory piece that crosses generation­al divides, from Taiwan to New York.

The movie’s most vibrant images come early. It opens on a young boy running through shining rice fields in rural Taiwan. The boy, Pin-Jui (Tzi Ma), grows up to be a factory worker. He reconnects with a girl he met in those fields, who becomes his first love. Their scenes together, dancing, are handsome. But when Pin-Jui is given the opportunit­y to go to America, it comes with the bargain of an arranged marriage, to a woman named Zhenzhen (Fiona Fu).

These scenes are overlaid with contempora­ry ones of an older PinJui and his grown daughter, Angela (Christine Ko). She is navigating her own heartbreak but finds her stoic father indifferen­t to her pain. His reflection­s of his past play out as a withheld history that, if he relents, could bond them.

Tigertail comes off more as an idea of an arthouse movie than one propelled by its own volition. While the 1960s-set scenes have a warm glow, the modern-day ones are flat. We’ve been blessed lately with films that chronicle multi-generation­al tales, straddling Asia and America, like last year’s The Farewell (in which Ma also co-starred) and the upcoming Sundance winner Minari. Tigertail doesn’t rise to the level of those movies, but it contribute­s to a heartening trend.

 ?? Photos / AP Tigertail. ?? Yo-Hsing Fang and Hong Chi Lee in
Photos / AP Tigertail. Yo-Hsing Fang and Hong Chi Lee in
 ??  ?? Tzi Ma and Christine Ko in the film.
Tzi Ma and Christine Ko in the film.

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