Los Angeles Times

Dramedy goes back to the future

- — Katie Walsh

The Chinese family dramedy “Duckweed,” directed by Han Han and written by Yu Meng, is a winsome riff on “Back to the Future.” Race car driver Lang (Chao Deng) wins the race of his career but still harbors a grudge toward his stern father, Zheng (Eddie Peng), who never accepted his dreams.

His life flashes before his eyes during a car accident and goes step one further — Lang travels back in time to before he was born, befriendin­g his youthful, immature father, an affable, cocksure gangster, and getting to know his mother (Liying Zhao), who died when he was a baby.

For all of its serious themes, “Duckweed” has a whimsical, magical realist sensibilit­y, underscore­d by quirky musical montages and a penchant for American country songs.

Peng and Deng as father and son and later best friends are a charming, soulful pair — despite some dodgy old-age makeup on Peng in the film’s bookends.

Lang soon learns that you can’t meddle with fate and ultimately embraces the chance to get to know his parents as people, not authority figures or blurry memories.

The film can’t quite figure out how to wrap up, overstayin­g its welcome with multiple resolution­s, but its heart is in the right place, using fantasy to reveal poignant truths about empathy and redemption.

“Duckweed.” In Mandarin with English subtitles. Unrated. Running time: 1 hour, 42 minutes. Playing: AMC Atlantic Times Square 14, Monterey Park; AMC Puente Hills 20, City of Industry.

 ?? Chinalion Film Distributi­on Inc. ?? EDDIE PENG is a race car driver who goes back in time and meets younger versions of his parents.
Chinalion Film Distributi­on Inc. EDDIE PENG is a race car driver who goes back in time and meets younger versions of his parents.

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