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The Joy Luck Club (1993)
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Reviews Counted:30
Fresh:26
Rotten:4
Average Rating:6.9/10
Runtime: 2 hrs 19 mins
Genre: Dramas
Synopsis: After the successful independent features about Chinese-American life DIM SUM and EAT A BOWL OF TEA, director Wayne Wang took on the daunting task of adapting Amy Tan's sprawling, multigenerational... After the successful independent features about Chinese-American life DIM SUM and EAT A BOWL OF TEA, director Wayne Wang took on the daunting task of adapting Amy Tan's sprawling, multigenerational best-seller THE JOY LUCK CLUB. After her mother's death, June (Ming-Na Wen) is asked to take her place in a mahjong club. The three other members, like her mother, were all born in China before the 1949 revolution. When June learns that she has two half sisters in China, she plans a trip to meet them. With this catalyst, the women begin to tell stories, not just about but their own mothers and their lives in China, but also about their often strained relationships with their Americanized daughters. The flashbacks to China are dramatic, and the stories are heartbreaking. As the film progresses, June learns about a culture that's supposedly her own but that she can touch only through the commonality of the mother-daughter bond. It is this nexus that makes the movie work. There are multiple points of view, but they are always connected by the universal desire for one generation of women to pass on their hopes for a better life to their daughters. This feeling, without being cloying or overly sentimental, underlines the emotional tales in this moving, well-acted, and beautifully staged drama. [More]
Starring: Rosalind Chao, France Nuyen, Tamlyn Tomita, Kieu Chinh
Starring: Rosalind Chao, France Nuyen, Tamlyn Tomita, Kieu Chinh, Lisa Lu, Tsai Chin, Ming-Na Wen, Lauren Tom, Chao Li Chi, Victor Wong
Director: Wayne Wang
Director: Wayne Wang
Screenwriter: Amy Tan, Ron Bass
Reviews for The Joy Luck Club
Despite strong performances by the cast of talented Asian actresses, the movie never sweeps us up in its spell.
Gives refreshing -- and bittersweet -- dimension to the age-old clash between generations.
At the end of the press screening, Disney's publicists handed out Kleenex to the critics, an effective marketing tool but one that trivilaize the picture, relegating it to the status of a three-handkerchief women's melodrama.
Affirms our respect for the arduous spiritual journeys of mothers and daughters.
It's ravishing to look it, a truly gorgeous object. But it is not deep.
It's fascinating and satisfying the way the diverse threads are knitted together into a single tapestry.
Both sweeping and intimate, a lovely evocation of changing cultures and enduring family ties.
...not only fails to give the novel cinematic stature; it denigrates the delicate beauty of the book itself.
There's no ignoring the fact that The Joy Luck Club is a moving work, both a contemporary and an eternal story about the interlinked boundaries between mothers and daughters.
The stories are often heart-wrenching and often inspirational. If this is a woman's film, it at least is miles ahead of something like Beaches.
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