Taupo & Turangi Herald

Humorous snapshot of city love

Love story with a light-hearted take on the film industry

-

Shortcomin­gs (R, 92 mins) Streaming on Neon Rentals and Arovision Directed by Randall Park Reviewed by Jen Shieff

.. .. .. .. .. ..

Comedy, drama and romance blend beautifull­y in Shortcomin­gs, with special interest for people who like movies. Fun is poked at film festivals, filmmaking and how to run, or not run, a cinema under threat of closure.

Actually, it does close, this particular fictional movie theatre in Berkeley, California, freeing up the main character Ben (Justin H Min) who’s been its manager, to chase his girlfriend Miko (Ally Maki) to New York.

Before that, we get to know Ben. The toilet-bowl epistemolo­gical art of his jazz punk employee Autumn (Tavi Gevinson) deserves Ben’s laughter, but although Ben’s reaction at that time was understand­able, at other times he’s superior, rather tactless and often misses cues.

In essence, he’s a good-looking guy but a very self-absorbed one, incapable of getting out of his own way.

And yet, he’s likeable and we feel for him when one after another, he misreads situations and things backfire on him.

The best thing about the film is the sweet friendship between Ben and his lesbian academic friend Alice (Sherry Cola).

Each of them has commitment­phobia and they share their moans and gripes about their dates in various cafe´ s.

Along with their increasing awareness of their shortcomin­gs in relationsh­ips, each of them, as Asians, has an increasing awareness of the shortcomin­gs of the wider population when it comes to understand­ing what it is to be Asian in America and what being an outsider means.

Adapted from a 2007 graphic novel by Adrian Tomine, Park’s directoria­l debut is in many ways a typical romcom but its point of difference is that it brings in Asian American identity.

One of Miko’s difficulti­es with Ben is that he seems to prefer white women, which he strenuousl­y denies (hypocritic­ally), but then the tables are turned and Miko, in New York taking a break from Ben and dating a tall, rich, white man called Leon (Timothy Simons), has to put up with Ben accusing her of dating a “rice king”.

Another recent rom-com adapted from a book, Love At First Sight, based on The Statistica­l Probabilit­y of Love at First Sight by Jennifer E Smith, relied, as in most rom-coms, on the chemistry of the two stars, The White Lotus’ Hayley Lu Richardson and former EastEnders star Ben Hardy and a lot of cliche´ s that made for comfort viewing.

There’s less focus on chemistry and a lot that’s fresh and different for a rom-com in Shortcomin­gs: a queer house party, an off-the-wall performanc­e art show, a womanising lesbian and somebody being accused of being an Asian fetishist, which is then humorously defined.

The only groan-worthy cliche´ in Shortcomin­gs is Ben running through the streets of New York for one last meeting with Miko, but that’s prefaced by Ben and Alice talking about Ben not running through the streets of New York for one last meeting with Miko.

Full of humour, a refreshing take on how people form relationsh­ips and good shots of the Bay area and New York. Thoroughly heartwarmi­ng and enjoyable.

Rating: 3.5 stars

 ?? ?? Justin H Min, Timothy Simons and Ally Maki star in Randall Park’s directoria­l debut, Shortcomin­gs.
Justin H Min, Timothy Simons and Ally Maki star in Randall Park’s directoria­l debut, Shortcomin­gs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand