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MTV Films Present: Better Luck Tomorrow | 
enlarge | Actors: Shirley Anderson (iii), Ashley Arai, Ryan Cadiz, Karin Anna Cheung, Danielle Conner Studio: Paramount Category: DVD
List Price: $14.98 Buy Used: $1.03 You Save: $13.95 (93%)
New (26) Used (42) from $1.03
Rating: 75 reviews Sales Rank: 37216
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dvd-video, Widescreen, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: R (Restricted) Region: 1 Number Of Discs: 1 Running Time: 99 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.1 x 0.6
MPN: D342854D ISBN: 0792194012 UPC: 097363428541 EAN: 9780792194019 ASIN: B0000AI424
Theatrical Release Date: 2002 Release Date: September 30, 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: overall very good condition ! free upgrade 1st class shipping !!
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Justin Lin's well-received 2002 independent feature, Better Luck Tomorrow, is a strangely appealing story of the mysterious, somehow inexorable drift of an ultra-conscientious, Southern California high school senior, Ben (Parry Shen), toward a fateful interlude with crime. Though highly focused on impressing colleges with his thoughtful balance of excellent grades, energized volunteer work (as a translator), and varsity sports (warming the bench during basketball games), something about Ben appears to be unraveling. Perhaps it is an attraction to his out-of-reach lab partner (Karin Anna Cheung), or his growing attachment to hard cash, or simply the malaise that coats his every act of self-denial. In any case, he and a brood of fellow Asian American overachievers metamorphose into the local go-to gang of black-market thievery--all while keeping up their classes. Lin brings a fresh angle to the exhausted youth-crime genre, and clarifies, with no small wisdom, the distinction between building a future and living one's destiny. --Tom Keogh
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| Customer Reviews: Read 70 more reviews...
Loved the movie - Didn't understand the ending January 26, 2008 He who spends too much (Chicago) Loved the plot, the acting was decent and soundtrack was pleasing as well. But I wish someone could explain how the ending was possible, taking the intro of the movie into account. Maybe I missed something.
This is refreshing. August 9, 2007 L. Smith (Denver Co) After decades of being type-casted by other films, its refreshing to see Asian American kids just doing normal American stuff. Lets leave all the stereo-types behind.
A microcosm deserves to be seen, with moral issues of certain school behaviors June 30, 2007 Pork Chop (Lisbon, Portugal) BETTER LUCK TOMORROW (2002) is a remarkable independent film, highly realistic and original in the story that it tells. It brings forth, as well, multicultural aspects as it has viewers mulling over that and other moral and faith implications and foundations important to each person. These too often are not taught, are forgotten or dismissed as a pointless "overhead" needing eliminatation in the final "profit analysis " in many people's lives.
Although the events occur in high school, the audience will surely empathize with quite a bit of the storym as youngters build and solify their character during those school years, from taking on new life experiences.
In this tale, just as food cooks faster in a pressure cooker, and so do the characters in this movie, aging faster than otherwise, by taking on a large number of obligations, activities and social interactions, beyond what many students do. The protagonists are extraordinarily self-aware of what is needed in landing a scholarship in the most expensive, brand name US universities, thus ambitious objectives, in terms of a resume-building, such as volunteerism, exam results, sports team membership, work experience.
A handful of school colleagues become friends, and thru exterior influence, adopt small time scams, evolving to bigger ones, for monetary profit, egomaniacal reasons (social status, self-worth) and for the challenge. Examples shown include exam cheating, shoplifting and simulating a return of merchandise, narco-trafficking, outright theft of goods from their own school, etc.
A number of parallel issues, not edited out, are raised such as the discomfort of affirmative action among those who are minorities who obtained their jobs by merit. Another is the ghetto aspect to this group of friends, all Asian yet all fully immersed in American culture, well adjusted.
The flaw of this work, is that the moral aspects are brought out into the open, in a clumsy, very vague, generalized manner, without any familiarized notion of any organized existing religion or life philosophy, irrealistically. The confusion, hesitance, remorse, pain and self-doubt shown by the lead character, from a murder, sexual excesses, simulated burglary, participation in the scams perhaps could have been clarified, assisted by popular faiths. All students are shown as atheistic or totally clueless about this, which seems implausible, even unrealistic.
The picture is filmed with talent, very well edited, until the cadence of action seems to flounder at the 75 minute mark, in the plateau of the events, preparing the public for a relatively short ending sequence. There's a sharp, clear DVD transfer, not quite a widescreen. The soundtrack is original, and skillfully couples various musical selections with the proper moods.
Undoubtedly, this work deserves to be seen, for the microcosm that is laid out bare on screen, with events entirely realistic, and from the action that maintains viewers attentions throughout as well as from the aspects already mentioned (moral, multicultural) if not the natural charisma of the actors.
Interesting Flick February 21, 2007 Charles J. Rector (Woodstock, IL United States) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Better Luck Tomorrow is an unusual little movie in that it is both a creation of Asian Americans and, most significantly, a film with Asian male characters who are not martial arts experts. In fact, it does not appear that any of the characters in this production are into martial arts at all.
The main characters are a group of Asian American students in Orange County who are generally academic standouts. After a fight with a white football jock who took exception to an Asian American tennis player wearing a letterman's jacket, the tennis player becomes studly in the eyes of the other students. The other Asian American male youths see adopting a violent pose as being the ticket to respect. Even so, they still must pay attention to their grades and the upcoming SAT's. Also, they are still unable to score any dates.
This latter point leads us to the true context that this movie needs to be seen in. Young Asian American males find it difficult to get dates. Many Asian American females seem to prefer white guys so much so that for every 1,000 married Asian American women, there are only 860 married Asian American males. Meanwhile, females of other racial groups seem to have little to no interest in Asian American male youth. Hence a great deal of frustration among many young Asian American males who cannot get dates.
This is a most interesting movie that hopefully presages more movies down the line pertaining to the Asian American experience that are made by Asian Americans.
A breakthrough for Asian American cinema. January 14, 2007 James J. Kim (California) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
Like many of you who have read the on-line reviews, "Better Luck Tomorrow" is a breakthrough film for Asian Americans. This is the film that helped put Justin Lin on the map, and I loved it for its respect in showing the pressures of high school life in the United States from the Asian American perspective. It is a groundbreaking film with a well-written script, and I commend it for the strong performances of its lead actors Parry Shen, Karin Anna Cheung, John Cho, and Sung Kang.
"Better Luck Tomorrow" is the first full-on Asian American feature film I have ever seen. Just imagine how I must have felt after years of watching my people portrayed as 1-dimensional stereotypical caricatures on screen for us to finally see a film that accurately portrays Asian Americans. Lin, arguably, understands the Asian American ethos better than any other Hollywood filmmaker out there. He's still a rising filmmaker in Hollywood who is making a name for himself in an extremely racist industry; I hope that in a few years, there will be more films by Lin and many other Asian American filmmakers that dispel a lot of the negative stereotypes perpetuated upon Asian Americans by mainstream American society for the past 150 years.
Most other Asian American filmmakers never got a shot at the brass ring, and I am sorry to hear that, but Lin did through his chance meeting with M.C. Hammer, who was impressed by the well-written quality of Lin's script for "Better Luck Tomorrow." This came at a time when Lin had no funding left for his independent film production company and was on the verge of shutting down. It was M.C. Hammer who helped fund Lin's film ($250,000 to produce "Better Luck Tomorrow"), and helped arrange Lin to meet with MTV executives to promote and distribute it through Paramount Pictures Studios. The only "luck" involved throughout the film's funding, production, and distribution was in its title. Lin put his heart and creative energy into this film like the way John G. Avildsen did with the original "Rocky."
I want Justin Lin to succeed in Hollywood, and his success allows more doors to be opened for Asian American filmmakers and Asian American actors who want to work in Hollywood. Lin got his foot in the gate, and he's prying it open. He has clearly shown to the American mainstream that Asian Americans can be portrayed as all-around human beings who can love, hate, think, feel like everyone else. At this point, Asian American filmmakers are still trying to find "a voice" in the Hollywood community. It's still in the "trials and tribulations" stage, and they have to take the lumps with the praises. We have to work with what we've got until that day arrives. It is good to know that we were able to establish that first breakthrough with "Better Luck Tomorrow."
As for martial arts, leave those films to Chuck Norris...
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