SAVING FACE

Year: 2004
USA: Sony Pictures Classics
Cast: Michelle Krusiec, Joan Chen, Lynn Chen, Jin Wang, Guang Lan Koh, Jessica Hecht, Ato Essandoh, David Shih, Brian Yang, Nathanel Geng, Mao Zhao, Louyong Wong, Clare Sum, Qian Luo, Richard Chang, Hoon Lee, Ruth Zhang, Connie Hsia, Jackson Ning, Jamie Guan, Paul Sum, Brittany Perrineau, Xiaofeng Zang, Lu Yu, Fang Yulin, Pamela Payton-Wright, Saidah Arrika Ekulona, Twinkle Burke, Tina Johnson, Phillip Meng, Chloe Tsang, Rosa Luo, Christy Qin, Nan Meng
Director: Alice Wu
Country: USA
USA: 91 mins
USA Rated: R for some sexuality and language
USA Release Date: 27 May 2005 (Limited Release)


Synopsis

For 28 year old New Yorker Wilhelmina "Wil" Pang (Michelle Krusiec), life is a juggling act between a promising career as a surgeon and her responsibilities as a dutiful daughter. Like the #7 train she takes to visit her Chinese family on a weekly basis, Wil is perpetually in transit between two worlds. The expectations of the Flushing, Queens society she is from and the desires that alienate her from it have made Wil content to live below the surface - even if it means playing an inadvertent game of charades with her widowed mother (Joan Chen) and the old world Ma represents. The masquerade is comic even in its pain as Wil tolerates Ma's weekly set ups with eligible Chinese-American boys at the Friday Chinese socials; but it quickly becomes a farce when Ma's mask cracks first.

One night, Wil comes home to find Ma on her doorstep - pregnant. Disgraced by the Chinese community, and with nowhere else to go, Ma moves in with her daughter, making it difficult for Wil to nurture a budding relationship with gorgeous dancer Vivian (Lynn Chen). As her carefully compartmentalized worlds collide, Wil is forced to find her mother a husband, placate her girlfriend, and choose between breaking a cycle of keeping up appearances, or risk losing the girl she loves.

SAVING FACE is a romantic comedy about a daughter struggling to understand her mother's heart, which ultimately allows her to understand her own. It is the story of unspoken loves, contemporary and cultural taboos, and the journey of two women towards living their lives honestly.