Daily Archives: July 21, 2011

Secret Show for Japan with Linkin Park x B’z

Secret Show for Japan with Linkin Park x B’z

On August 31, 2011, Linkin Park and Japan’s best-selling artist B’z will perform at a small intimate show at a secret venue in Los Angeles to benefit Music for Relief and their work with Save the Children to provide much needed earthquake and tsunami relief in Japan. This is the opportunity to see Linkin Park like you’ve never seen them before. After B’z support of Music for Relief by lending a song to Download to Donate for Japan, Linkin Park invited best-selling Japanese band B’z to play at this unique show with them.

The only way to get tickets to the event is to raise $500 for the cause by creating a fundraising page. You can see a sample here. Tickets are limited, only the first 500 people to reach the fundraising goal will get invited to the show. The venue will only be announced to those who earn tickets, approximately one week before the show. Raise more than $500 and you could get a chance for a meet & greet with Linkin Park or even a signed instrument.

100% of net proceeds benefit children affected by the multiple disasters in Japan to provide child care services and financial support to children at risk of not continuing their studies, psychological support, as well as play zones for those who cannot play outside due to radiation fears. You can help by donating here.

Secret Show for Japan with Linkin Park x B’z

Promo for Secret Show for Japan with Linkin Park x B’z

SECRET SHOW FOR JAPAN

About Music for Relief Founded by two-time Grammy winning/multi-platinum rock band Linkin Park, Music for Relief is a 501 (c) (3) non-profit organization dedicated to providing aid to victims of natural disasters and the prevention of such disasters. Since its inception in 2005, Music for Relief has raised over $4 million for victims of multiple disasters across four continents and also supports environmental programs to help in prevention and mitigation of future natural disasters. The organization was recently recognized by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon for the Download to Donate program to raise funds and awareness in the aftermath of the Haiti earthquake.

White Frog cast

White Frog cast

Director Quentin Lee is working on a new movie “White Frog”. He’s got a huge star studded Asian American cast including Twilight Saga’s Booboo Stewart to star in the leading role. Stewart will play Nick, a neglected teen with mild Asperger’s syndrome whose life is challenged and ultimately affirmed by the unexpected fate of his adored older brother Chaz, played by Harry Shum Jr. (Glee, LXD). Joan Chen (The Last Emperor) and BD Wong (Law and Order: SVU) are confirmed to play the roles of their parents. Margaret Cho (Drop Dead Diva) will play the role of Nick’s unconventional psychiatrist. Kelly Hu (XMEN 2, Hawaii 5-0) and Amy Hill (50 First Dates) are also slated to be in the film. Here’s a synopsis for White Frog:

High-school freshman, Nick (The Twilight Saga’s Booboo Stewart), is a neglected teen with mild Asperger’s syndrome whose life is challenged and ultimately changed forever when tragedy hits his family. WHITE FROG is a universal story of the power of family, friendship, and love positioned to appeal to a broad audience in the same way as ORDINARY PEOPLE, JOY LUCK CLUB, and THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT.

The low budget independent film has just begun production. You can follow along behind the scene here. Previously, director Quentin Lee released the comedy hit The People I’ve Slept With featuring Karin Anna Cheung and Archie Kao. He’s hitting up all the A-list Asian American celebs.

The People I’ve Slept With Trailer

Enforcing the Silence Trailer

Enforcing the Silence Trailer

“Enforcing the Silence” explores silence and loss in the tragic story of a young community worker who may have been murdered for expressing his political beliefs.

Lam Duong founded the Vietnamese Youth Development Center in San Francisco and published a liberal newspaper that reprinted stories from communist Vietnam following the Vietnam War. On July 21, 1981, the 27-year-old was shot dead outside his apartment in broad daylight. Local police have never convicted anyone in the killing, so the motive remains unknown. But within days of Lam’s murder, news spread that a shadowy, anti-communist group had claimed responsibility, sending a chilling message to Vietnamese refugees everywhere: stay in line with your political views or risk death. Between 1982 and 1990, five more Vietnamese Americans – four of them journalists – were violently killed, many believe for political reasons. Vietnamese journalists are the largest group of immigrant journalists murdered on U.S. soil, claiming five lives out of the ten immigrant journalists that have been killed in America since 1981. All the Vietnamese murders were linked to a terrorist group in the Vietnamese American community, but police and federal officials have yet to solve any of the cases, including Lam’s.

Thirty years later, new filmmaker Tony Nguyen unlocks the mystery of Lam Duong’s life and death, and uncovers truths that Vietnamese Americans have never publicly explored. For the first time on film, Lam’s loved ones, federal investigators, and present-day journalists speak out about their experiences and reveal the risks that Vietnamese Americans have faced for exercising their first amendment rights in the U.S.

Mixing personal interviews with startling historical and present-day footage, ENFORCING THE SILENCE provides a disturbing in-depth look at a war-torn community that continues to struggle to find its place in a democratic society. As the U.S. finds itself entrenched in conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan, this film offers fresh insight into the long-term costs of war.

Catch this film at the 2011 NY Asian American International Film Festival (AAIFF). For more screening, check out their site here.

Enforcing the Silence Trailer