I’ve rounded up ten of my favorite Asian films for 2008. They’re in no particular order and each is unique. Some are comedies. Some are dramas. Some are for the whole family. And some might have you scratching your head asking “What did I just watch?”

Anyone posting spoilers will be dealt with severely.



Ashes of Time Redux

Wong Kar Wai’s martial-arts saga returns restored and expanded from his original 1994 production. With multiple story lines and kinetic fight scenes, action fans and arty film fans can enjoy it together. It’s got a new coat of paint from today’s latest post-production technologies, but is that for better or for worse?
Cast: Brigitte Lin, Leslie Cheung, Maggie Cheung, Tony Leung Chiu Wai, Jacky Cheung, Tony Leung Ka Fai, Li Bai, Carina Lau, Charlie Yeung



The Sky Crawlers

Mamoru Oshii returns with existentialism in anime form. Continuing his quiet storytelling laden with philosophical subtext, and not so subtext at times, “The Sky Crawlers” asks what does being forever young really mean? Despite the amazing fighter plane scenes, this is a thinking person’s film. Oshii builds a complete alternate reality mixing Japan, Europe and America for a surreal journey into the world of children that can only die in battle.
Cast: Rinko Kikuchi, Ryo Kase, Chiaki Kuriyama



Speed Racer

Rain comes to the American big screen in this psychedelic crap-fest of a movie from the Wachowski Brothers. I have nothing to hide here. It’s just in the list cause Rain made it to Hollywood. Suddenly, American girls everywhere realized “Asian guys are yummy”.
Cast: Rain, some other actors in a stink bomb of a movie



The Girl Who Leapt Through Time (Toki o kakeru shôjo)

Ok, I know a lot of you are saying this is a 2006 film - and you’re right - IN JAPAN!!! But it didn’t make it to the US theaters till 2008. I thought this was some childish coming of age movie for the girls. I was wrong. There’s a reason this movie from a small anime studio beat out Studio Ghiibli at the box office. Because it’s just so damn good. I cried at the end.
Cast: Riisa Naka, Takuya Ishida, Mitsutaka Itakura



Ping Pong Playa

Director Jessica Yu and writer-actor Jimmy Tsai reclaim the Chinese roots of table tennis with 2008’s major Asian American indie film. Family, redemption, ping pong, and the honor of Miss Chinatown equal a lot of laughs. You know what I’m sayin’, dawg?!
Cast: Jimmy Tsai, Andrew Vo, Khary Payton, Jim Lau, Roger Fan



Princess of Nebraska

Director Wayne Wang goes from big budget Hollywood to an indie film on a shoestring budget. Through the eyes of a girl born and raised in “New China”, Wang examines Chinese identity in Mainland and America, Cultural Revolution and after. The entire film was available legally in High Quality on YouTube but has since been taken down. =(
Cast: Ling Li, Brian Danforth, Pamelyn Chee



Ponyo on the Cliff (Gake no Ue no Ponyo)

Written and directed by famed anime filmmaker Hayao Miyazaki. (Do I really need to say anything else?) Ponyo is a ‘fish girl’. She befriends a five-year-old human boy, Soosuke. I could tell you more, but you would hate me for spoiling it.
Cast: Yuria Nara, Hiroki Doi



The Chaser (Chugyeogja)

A cop-turned-pimp has his girls disappearing. Why? (Hint: relliK laireS) This is the kind of sex and violence thriller that Hollywood just can’t seem to get right most of the time. That’s a job best left to Korean Cinema.
Cast: Yun-seok Kim, Jung-woo Ha, Yeong-hie Seo



Cape No.7 (海角七號 Hai jiao qi hao)

Director Wei Te-Sheng’s first feature film and winner of three awards at the Taipei Film Festival has become the 2nd top grossing film in Taiwan’s history. Long lost loves and a rock band of misfits will have you cheering at the end then coming straight home to order the soundtrack on YesAsia.com.
Cast: Van Fan, Chie Tanaka



Kung Fu Panda

Hollywood finally got China right. It only took a cartoon to make it happen. If you know kung fu, you’ll smile at the kung fu inside jokes, and if you don’t, then why haven’t you signed up for a kung fu class yet?! Great story, amazing animation, an all star cast, and a sincere Asian sensibility are the (secret?) ingredients that make this a big winner.
Cast: Jack Black, Dustin Hoffman, Angelina Jolie, Ian McShane, Jackie Chan, Seth Rogen, Lucy Liu, David Cross, Randall Duk Kim, James Hong, Dan Fogler

This blog posting is part of the 5 day 2008 End of the Year event happening Dec. 15-19.

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Yeah that’s true.


Miss.Kang - 12/17/08 6:59 pm

Ah...Poor Jet. He shouldn’t play these parts then. Jackie turned down the part to Lethal Weapon because he didn’t want to play a bad guy.

In Jet’s defense, I’m sure these kind of career decisions have deeper complications.


Ah...Poor Jet. He shouldn’t play these parts then. Jackie turned down the part to Lethal Weapon because he didn’t want to play a bad guy.


I ask all further people with Mummy 3 questions to read this before posting:
The Mummy 3: Insult To China and Chinese People?
http://www.chinasmack.com/stories/the-mummy-3-insult-to-china-and-chinese-people/

or if you think Chinese movie-goers might be biased, Variety Magazine online - considered Hollywood’s paper of record - said this ain’t-that-the-truth sound bite:
“A few pictures went up recently of Jet as the Evil Chinese Stereotype...”
http://www.varietyasiaonline.com/component/option,com_myblog/show,4823


:O Oh yeah well there were other two but then all the big names like Russel Wong, Michelle Yeoh, etc were good people!


Miss.Kang - 12/17/08 5:23 am

Just Jet Li right?

Wrong.


Just Jet Li right?


minty - 12/17/08 4:27 am

hmm if you’re going by Asian impact...Mummy 3? How many big budget Hollywood has a cast of mostly Asians?

If I recall, most of the Asian actors played characters that were evil-doers, correct?


hmm if you’re going by Asian impact...Mummy 3? How many big budget Hollywood has a cast of mostly Asians?


Good question. Haha I consider anything made by Asian with Asian leads an Asian film.


aznbaby - 12/16/08 11:12 pm

What’s considered an Asian movie?

If there’s Asian actors/actresses?
If it’s made in Asia?
If it’s made by Asians?
Or...?? lol

Just curious what’s everyone’s thoughts.

lol I was wondering the same thing.


What’s considered an Asian movie?

If there’s Asian actors/actresses?
If it’s made in Asia?
If it’s made by Asians?
Or...?? lol

Just curious what’s everyone’s thoughts.


Ah Well that’s fine. Haha


uchiha - 12/16/08 9:15 pm

No Three Kingdoms?

That’s also a good one.

Next time, I’m gonna have to make it the TOP DOZEN, not the TOP TEN, so I can squeeze a few more movies into the list.


Kangta - 12/16/08 9:28 pm

Planet Bboy? raspberry Or did that come out 2007?

Yeh, that was a tough call for me to make. I weighed “social awareness” into my judging from an Asian American perspective. That’s because I’m here in New York City and I have to create some sort of barometer for myself.

Speed Racer was an awful movie, but I made it clear I put it on the list because of Rain. Millions of Americans got to see Rain, an Asian man, a Korean man, on the big screen backed by Hollywood. And Rain was cool. And to millions of American women, the epiphany that Asian men are very, very yummy. People (and that’s millions of) didn’t walk in thinking “Asian actor” but they certainly walked out thinking it. Thus an awful movie, but huge social awareness points. Up next, Rain is going to be in another Hollywood movie called Ninja Assassin. I hope he keeps opening doors for himself and future Asian actors.

In the end, I had to deduct for Planet B-Boy’s very limited theatrical release. Make no mistake, an excellent film and an exciting documentary, but I think Planet B-Boy will have far more reach and social influence as it circulates in DVD than it did in theaters. (Hopefully this won’t spoil my friendship with director Benson Lee! Sorry, Benson!!!)

The Sky Crawlers also has a very limited theatrical release, but it’s also trying to be entered for an Academy Award thus giving it greater social awareness points for Asian media.

Most of the films I’ve listed have a large amount of social awareness points from me. There are a few exceptions where a film didn’t have much social awareness scoring like The Girl Who Leapt Thru Time. In that case, it was just so surprisingly damn good. It made me cry. The original from 1979 did too.


TiffanieJLee - 12/16/08 10:06 pm

I love Jessica Yu! I got to meet her when I worked at the 2006 ACCD Conference; I had no idea what to say to her and ended up just smiling like a chump.

I’ve been looking forward to seeing Cape No. 7, The Girl Who Leapt Through Time, and The Sky Crawlers, too. Sweet list.

lol it’s ok i’ve done that before too hehe thinking of that, I was too shy to go down and talk to Jimmy Tsai of Ping Pong Playa, hehe


I love Jessica Yu! I got to meet her when I worked at the 2006 ACCD Conference; I had no idea what to say to her and ended up just smiling like a chump.

I’ve been looking forward to seeing Cape No. 7, The Girl Who Leapt Through Time, and The Sky Crawlers, too. Sweet list.


Kangta - 12/16/08 9:28 pm

Planet Bboy? raspberry Or did that come out 2007?

I saw it earlier this year in march it was wayy hot!


Planet Bboy? raspberry Or did that come out 2007?


Most of them but The Chaser is Korean.


Are these just US releases?


Speed Racer was totally flopperiffic! I saw it 4 times. I might watch it again.


No Three Kingdoms?


Speed Racer? Really?


The Chaser is a good pick. Won so many awards.


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