Monthly Archives: September 2008

The Amazing Truth About Queen Raquela

Raquela is a transsexual – or ‘ladyboy’ – from the Philippines who dreams of
escaping the streets of Cebu City for a fairy tale life in Paris. In order
to make her dreams come true, she turns from prostitution toward the more
lucrative business of Internet porn. Her success as a porn star brings new
friends, including Valerie, a ladyboy in Iceland, and Michael, the owner of
the website Raquela works for. Valerie helps Raquela get as far as Iceland.
From there, Michael offers her a rendezvous in Paris. Will Paris be
everything she dreamed of? And will Michael turn out to be her Prince
Charming?

9/26/08 Hollywood, Regent Showcase Theater

614 N. La Brea

09/26/08 New York, Quad Cinema

34 West 13th Street

10/03/08 Palm Desert, Cinemas Palme d’Or

72840 Highway 111

10/10/08 Columbus, Drexel East Theatre

2254 E. Main St.

The Amazing Truth About Queen Raquela Trailer

Lindsay Price returns to Lipstick Jungle

Lindsay Price stars as the free-spirited fashion designer “Victory Ford” in NBC’s enticing new drama series “Lipstick Jungle,” based on the best-selling book by Candace Bushnell. Victory was once the most celebrated up-and-coming fashion designer in the business, until the New York Times trashed her new fall collection. She must now pick up the pieces of her shattered life and rebuild her career, as she relies on her friends and the new man in her life, multi-billionaire Joe Bennett (Andrew McCarthy), to help her get back on her Jimmy Choo’s.

Price has served as a staple on network television since her starring role as “Janet Sosna” on “Beverly Hills, 90210.”

Born to parents of European and Korean decent, Price started acting at the age of eight with a guest role on “Finder of Lost Loves.” In 1991, she took on a two-year recurring role on the daytime drama “All My Children.” Price then appeared in another daytime drama, “The Bold and the Beautiful,” as Michael Lai from 1995-97, followed by her role in “Beverly Hills, 90210.”

Price also had a string of guest-starring roles in several hit series including “CSI,” “Becker,” “Jack & Jill,” “Coupling,” “Frasier” and “Pepper Dennis.” Her feature-film credits include the independent films “Lonely Street” and “Waterbourne.”

Earlier this year, Lindsay Price posed nude in Esquire magazine.

Watch the first episode of Season 2 of Lipstick Jungle

iaTV layoffs

Multiple sources are confirming that iaTV (formerly Imaginasian) has laid off the bulk of their staff. We have been following iaTV the past few months including Adam Ware joining Imaginasian, the changes he made to the TV lineup, and the rebrand and expansion of iaTV. Most recently iaTV were dropped from the San Francisco Bay Area, but signed up Tokyopop.

With the layoffs, will they be another AZN, which shutdown earlier this year. If it fails that will be two Asian American TV networks failing in the same year. Here’s some of our thoughts on the current situation unfolding at iaTV:

iaTV is branched in to too many things too early on. They have tentacles in cable TV, movie theaters, DVD productions, movie productions, and radio broadcasts.

With limited funding, it is not possible to do so many things. If they have established themselves as a player in cable TV first, they could have expanded gradually over time, but all these things at one time is too much to handle. It looks like CEO Adam Ware understands this and it trying to refocus the company on the cable TV with expansions of it reach. However, with iaTV dropped from Comcast in the San Francisco Area, that is a major blow. Adam Ware also made the misstep of dismissing KTSF in San Francisco. KTSF backed one of the earlier Asian American programming in StirTV and later Night Shift

This leads us to programming. Although the programming is massively overhauled, we still think it misses the mark with programs like Banzai.

In 2003, the Media Action Network for Asian Americans (MAANA) organized a protest against “Banzai” airing on FOX. MANAA, along with activists across the country, successfully persuaded advertisers to pull their ads. Banzai was soon removed from the network. MAANA did a great job back in 2003. With all that why in the world would the executives at iaTV put this program on “America’s only network for Asian Pop Culture”? This makes no sense to us.

iaTV still needs a lot of overhauling and focus. We see some glimmers of hope, but they must make these changes, or else they face the same fate as AZN.

Here’s an example of Banzai. Should this kind of programming be on iaTV?

2008 DC APA Film Festival

APA Film Presents the 9th Annual DC Asian Pacific American (APA) Film Festival Sept. 25 through Oct. 4, 2008 at locations throughout the Washington, D.C., area including Landmark’s E Street Cinema, Navy Memorial Theater, Goethe-Institut, and Freer Gallery of Art. The festival will showcase 14 features and over 45 short films. A complete schedule of films and descriptions is available at http://www.apafilm.org.

The Opening Night Presentation on Sept. 25th is AMAL, a complex drama involving a family’s dispute over their father’s will and his connection to a humble auto-rickshaw driver in New Delhi, India. Director Richie Mehta and lead actor Rupinder Nagra are scheduled to attend.

On Sept. 27th, the festival presents a day of programs at the Freer Gallery of Art, including the documentary THE SIAMESE CONNECTION about Chang and Eng, the famous conjoined twins of the 19th Century from Thailand; and LONG STORY SHORT, profiling Larry and Trudie Long, a popular Chinese American husband-and-wife nightclub act of the ‘40s and ‘50s.

Several other documentaries will make their DC premieres. MAUI BOYZ follows ten local men from Maui as they live, work and play according the “Aloha Spirit” of Hawaii. Dr. Sharadkumar Dicksheet, a Nobel Prize nominee and wheelchair-bound doctor, is the tenacious star of FLYING ON ONE ENGINE (SXSW 2008), traveling to India every year to perform hundreds of free operations for children with facial deformities. A pair of documentaries investigate the human rights struggle of Korean comfort women who were forced into military sexual slavery during World War II (BEHIND FORGOTTEN EYES, THE HOUSE OF SHARING.).

A number of films feature ensemble casts of new and veteran Asian and American actors, including the romantic comedy KISSING COUSINS (starring Samrat Chakrabarti, Gerry Bednob (40 YEAR OLD VIRGIN), Jaleel White, and David Alan Grier); and Filipino drama SANTA MESA (starring Jaime Tirelli (BELLA, GIRLFIGHT), Melissa Leo, and introducing Jacob Shalov).

Two programs will be presented in partnership with the National Museum of Women in the Arts. Anne Kaneko’s AGAINST THE GRAIN explores the lives of working artists amidst political and economic unrest in Peru; and SITA SINGS THE BLUES is a modern retelling of the Ramayana through spirited animation and blues music.

The Closing Night Presentation is KILLING OF A CHINESE COOKIE, Derek Shimoda’s offbeat documentary that ponders the life and meaning of the fortune cookie in American pop culture.

DC APA Film Festival Trailer Contest Winner by Chihwen Lo. (see all the 2008 DC APA Film Trailer Contest Finalists)

ID Film Fest in Los Angeles

The inaugural ID Film Fest, a new festival dedicated to contemporary digital films that explore and celebrate identity crisis in the diverse Asian/Pacific Islander communities, will showcase an international line-up of new and first-time locally-screened features, documentaries and shorts from Thursday, Sept. 25 through Sunday, Sept. 28, at the Japanese American National Museum’s Democracy Forum. The screenings are free to National Museum members and tickets are $5 for each film for non-members, with advanced ticket purchases recommended.

Organized by co-programmers Quentin Lee and the National Museum’s Koji Sakai, the ID Film Fest will feature several Los Angeles premieres of features and documentaries that examine, explore or celebrate the identity crisis in our diverse global Asian community.

“What Ridley Scott has imagined in Blade Runner is already a reality. Los Angeles is a postmodern collage of cultures and identity. Even within the broader umbrella of the ‘Asian American’ community, there are Japanese, Korean, Chinese, Vietnamese, Laotian, Cambodian Americans, just to name a few. Further diversifying the community are the division between first generation immigrants and those who were born here. A crisis of identity is inevitable and necessary even though we fantasize a more utopian unity,” observed Lee.

Opening night, Sept. 25, features the Los Angeles premiere of Michael Frank’s rarely seen Ra Choi, a drama about four Asian street kids, torn by poverty and drug use, trying to make a life for themselves in Sydney. Preceding the feature is Aldo Velasco’s hilarious short “Jenny Tran (Not Her Real Name)” based on a real life Asian American female ecstasy dealer.

Ra Choi Trailer

On Friday, Sept. 26, the Los Angeles premiere of Quentin Lee’s first documentary feature, 0506HK, will be screened. The documentary takes a humorous and touching study of the vanishing identity of his generation of “Hong Kong people” who were all born when it was still a colony of Great Britain. Since the 1997 handover, that Hong Kong has ceased to exist. The evening will also feature three shorts–“All of Me”, “Reverse Discri-Mission” and “Dimsum & Racetrack”–as part of the program, “Conflicting Passions”.

0506HK Trailer

Wee Li Lin’s comedic drama, Gone Shopping (Los Angeles premiere), will highlight the screenings on Saturday, Sept. 27. This presentation centers on a Singaporean housewife who faces her mid-life crisis by escaping to a 24-hour shopping mall. The evening also features Ann Kaneko’s comical and experimental sci-fi short, “Outer Limits Redux”, which will be shown first.

Gone Shopping Trailer

To close the inaugural festival with the theme, “Fiction/Non-Fiction”, Tony Toka’s energetic skate poetry short, “Skate Free”, will open the evening’s program. That will be followed by three half-hour documentaries (all Los Angeles premieres), including Marlyn M. Bilas’ “Shanti”, one of the first films about Fiji Indian Americans and the story of a 21-year-old prearranged bride who is diagnosed with cancer; “Running Dragon”, exploring the life of an aspiring Vietnamese Los Angeles actor who was adopted as an infant by an American family; and, Ling Liu’s “Officer Tsukamoto”, a gripping documentary that follows the cold case investigation of the murder of Japanese American police officer Ron Tsukamoto, who was shot and killed during a routine traffic stop in Berkeley in the 1970s.

Running Dragon Trailer

“In America, we tend to lump different Asians into one group, both for the informed and uniformed. This festival is founded to explore both the complexity and diversity of the global Asian identities,” explained Sakai, who is public program manager at the Japanese American National Museum. “We are proud to present the first edition of the festival and its films in our Democracy Forum.”

All screenings begin at 7:30 p.m. every night at the Democracy Forum in the National Center for the Preservation of Democracy. The building is located at 111 N. Central Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90012 (directly across the National Museum’s courtyard). Tickets can be purchased on-site.

Kal Penn back for House Season 5

After a very busy year, Kal Penn is back as Dr. Lawrence Kutner in House, now running it its fifth season. He serves on Senator Barack Obama’s Presidential Campaign’s National Arts Policy Committee and is a national surrogate for the candidate. Kal also serves on the celebrity advisory board of the Red Cross, and recently finished a semester as Adjunct Professor of Cinema, Sociology, and Asian American Studies at the University of Pennsylvania. Over the summer, we saw Kal Penn reprise the role of “Kumar” in the recently released comedy “Harold And Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay,” sequel to the 2004 cult classic “Harold And Kumar Go To White Castle.”

Penn received rave reviews for his starring role in the film “The Namesake,” based on the novel by Pulitzer Prize winner Jhumpa Lahiri and directed by Academy Award nominee Mira Nair.

Penn has appeared in other recent films including “A Lot Like Love” and “Superman Returns.” He had a recurring role on 24 and recently guest-starred on the hit series, “Law & Order: SVU.” Earlier credits include the Emmy Award- winning HBO comedy “Express: Aisle To Glory,” “Spin City,” “Buffy the Vampire Slayer,” “NYPD Blue,” “The Agency” and “Angel.”

Born and raised in New Jersey where he graduated from the Freehold Regional High School District’s Performing Arts High School, Penn received a Bachelor’s Degree in Sociology with a Specialization in Theatre, Film and Television from the prestigious School of Theater, Film and Television at UCLA, and is currently pursuing a Graduate Certificate in International Security at Stanford University. Currently, Penn lives in Los Angeles.

Catch House on Fox on Tuesdays.

Watch Kal Penn in the first episode of House Season 5