NEW YORK (AP) â The filmmaker Andrew Ahn grew up in what he calls âa Blockbuster Video family.â They would rent three or four movies every weekend. When Ahn was 8, his mom rented the VHS for âThe Wedding Banquet.â
âShe was like, âItâs this Asian movie that white people are talking about,ââ Ahn remembers. âShe rented it not knowing it was queer.â
Leeâs 1993 film followed a Taiwanese immigrant New Yorker (Winston Chao) who attempts to marry a woman (May Chin) to placate his parents and hide his gay partner (Mitchell Lichtenstein) from them. It was a still-rare gay, Asian American rom-com that became an Oscar-nominated landmark.
When Ahn, 39, was approached about revisiting âThe Wedding Banquet,â he was daunted. But, as the son of Korean immigrants, Ahn, whose movies include âDrivewaysâ and âFire Island,â felt like he had something to contribute.
âThroughout my career Iâve tried to explore this balance between sexuality and culture and family,â Ahn said in a recent interview over coffee. âI saw many gay films coming of age as a gay man where those things felt kind of siloed. Here, you could see how they were so intertwined. Watching it when I was 8 years old really set the bar.â
which opens in theaters Friday, is the most personal of remakes. Even that word, âremake,â his collaborators avoid when talking about it. Ahnâs film, starring Kelly Marie Tran, Lily Gladstone, Bowen Yang and Han Gi-chan, revisits and rebuilds Leeâs queer comedy of errors for a new generation.
âIt started with a very simple proposition: Nobody is remaking âThe Wedding Banquet,ââ says , who co-wrote both the original and Ahnâs film. âThe only way this film gets made is if we reenvision and take inspiration from Ang Leeâs original movie. But the fundamental requirement was: It must be something new and it must be something of our time.â
Just as Leeâs film was, Ahnâs âThe Wedding Banquetâ is âsomething fixed in history,â as A jubilant farce, radiant with queer love, âThe Wedding Banquetâ arrives 32 years later as both a big-screen symbol of whatâs changed for LGBTQ people since then, and what hasnât. Made last year, âThe Wedding Banquetâ premiered at the Sundance Film Festival just a week after the ushered in . Thatâs prompted Ahn and his cast to reconsider, and double down on, what this âWedding Banquetâ means for right now.
âItâs creating a space where joy is an act of resistance,â says Gladstone.
âThe joy of that community is under profound threat,â Schamus says. âYou would say to yourself maybe: Is this the time to have a queer romantic comedy? Things are not that funny right now. The answer to that very reasonable question is: This is what youâre fighting for. That joy is profoundly important, for everybody.â
Expanding the wedding parties
Ahnâs âThe Wedding Banquetâ centers not one couple but two. Min (Han) is in love with his partner, Chris (Yang), but, to fool his soon-to-visit grandmother Min tries for a sham wedding with Angela (Tran), their friend and housemate. Sheâll earn enough money in the transaction to pay for her IVF treatment with her partner, Lee (Gladstone).
Here, the family traditions are Korean, not Taiwanese. The intergenerational relationships (also visiting is Angelaâs mother, played by Joan Chen) have evolved. And the questions facing the couples â to marry, to have children â are much different than they were for closeted gay couples decades ago.
âThe stakes in the original are placed in survival,â says Yang, who also starred in Ahnâs âFire Island.â âThe sham wedding has to happen as a way to preserve this relationship that he has. To me, the thematic thing in this version is about community. Itâs about roots. Itâs about establishing a sense of place.â
Ahnâs antic yet sensitive film, set primarily around the Seattle home of Lee, a member of the Duwamish Tribe who purchased it to reclaim her family's land, is a textured portrait of a careening and chaotic but deeply loving home. Ahn, whose previous films have been warmed by a gentle sincerity, creates a patchwork dramedy stitched together by the intimacies and uncertainties of its two couples.
âThis film is the most like meâ
For Ahn, much of the movie came straight from his own experiences, so much so that, he says, he takes critiques of the film personally.
âThere are a lot of moments Iâve drawn from my life. The argument in the alley between Kelly Marie Tranâs character and Lily Gladstoneâs character, and Kellyâs character says, âIf it happens, it happens,ââ says Ahn. âThatâs something my boyfriend said to me the first time we talked about having kids.â
Tran, who came out publicly while make âThe Wedding Banquet,â found herself playing a character unusually close to herself, and in a working environment unfamiliar to the âStar Wars: The Last Jediâ star.
âThe whole crew and the whole cast being primarily queer wasnât something I experienced before,â says Tran. âAnd I didnât realize how healing that would be.â
Gladstone concurs: âEverybody who knows me well says that this film is the most like me of anything Iâve done.â
Yang, who was subjected to scientifically discredited as a teenager, says both versions of âThe Wedding Banquetâ correlate with something profound for him. He saw Leeâs film while in college, when he was concealing his sexuality from his parents. The filmâs ending struck him as a kind of aspiration for him and his family. Maybe they could reach that level of understanding one day, he hoped.
âThe movie ends on uncertainty but it still ends with this hug and it gave me this weird hope that if I could get to that point with my family, then things will be OK, then I could jump off from there,â Yang says. âSo I have this personal check-in where I can chart the arc with my own family, where Iâm now very transparent with them about that part of my life, where theyâre asking me if Iâm dating anybody, which I never thought would happen.
âItâs a pretty amazing benchmark for me.â
âA high quality-of-life projectâ
Whether âThe Wedding Banquetâ will connect with audiences the same way Lee's film did remains to be seen. But what's already clear is that Ahn's film reverberates with a spirit of tenderness and hope that will be sustaining for a wide swath of moviegoers. Gladstone, who signed onto it after her Oscar-nominated performance in refers to the film as âa high quality-of-life project,â and her co-stars hope the movie has a similar effect for its audience.
âItâs very complicated to be celebrating a community thatâs also being persecuted at that very moment,â says Tran. âItâs a lot to hold and to acknowledge all of it. Iâve definitely had that experience before, not particularly with the queer part of my identity but with the Asian part of my identity. What a privilege to be part of this beautiful piece of art that celebrates this community.â
âNow that weâre facing headwinds, it kind of loops back to survival,â says Yang. âBoth films are about survival. They are just each otherâs corollary.â
Jake Coyle, The Associated Press