ALWAYS BE MY MAYBE. This undated image shows Randall Park and Ali Wong in
a scene from the movie Always Be My Maybe. The newly released Netflix
movie is an Asian-American rom-com with a twist: ethnicity isn’t central to
the plot. (Photo courtesy of Netflix)
From The Asian Reporter, V29, #12 (June 17, 2019), page 13.
In Asian-led Always Be My Maybe, ethnicity is
secondary
By Terry Tang
The Associated Press
The newly released Netflix movie Always Be My Maybe, is an
Asian-American rom-com with a twist: ethnicity isn’t central to the plot.
It’s just stand-up comedian and actress Ali Wong and "Fresh Off the Boat"
actor Randall Park playing best friends and soulmates who happen to be
Asian, which may be the most refreshing part of all.
"It wasn’t the type of thing where we sat down and said before we wrote
it, ‘OK, we got to represent and make sure we’re making the perfect
Asian-American movie,’" Park told The Associated Press. "It was more like,
‘Let’s make a really heartfelt and really funny romantic comedy, a movie
that we’d really love to see.’"
In the flick, best friends Sasha (Wong) and Marcus (Park), who grew up
next door to each other in San Francisco, lose touch after a night of
passion. They are reunited 15 years later when Sasha, now a celebrity chef,
temporarily moves back home to launch a new restaurant.
Meanwhile, Marcus works for his father’s air conditioning company while
playing in a band. Despite both of them being in relationships and having
opposite lifestyles, it’s clear the more-than-friends feelings are still
there.
Like Crazy Rich Asians, the film showcases an all-Asian ensemble
and it’s romantic and funny. But that’s where the similarities end.
Wong, Park, and Michael Golamco, who met doing theater at the University
of California, Los Angeles, in the late ’90s, co-wrote the screenplay that
has more in common with When Harry Met Sally than Crazy Rich
Asians.
While the cast is Asian American, there’s no prominent east-meets-west
culture clash storyline like in Crazy Rich Asians.
Park, who plays a sweet-natured father of three on TV’s "Fresh Off the
Boat," has always wanted to play a romantic lead.
"I never really got afforded the chance by the industry. So it was the
type of thing ‘Well, I guess I got to write it,’" said Park, who is Korean
American.
First-time movie director Nahnatchka Khan, who is also the creator of
"Fresh Off the Boat," said it was thrilling to watch him embrace playing a
romantic leading man.
"He just pulls off the emotion," Khan said. "I think everybody has seen
him be really funny in all of his TV and movie work. But to have him kind of
carry this movie on his shoulders, you feel for him and you’re rooting for
him."
Wong, who is Vietnamese and Chinese American, is courted by two other
characters played by Keanu Reeves, who is part Chinese and Native Hawaiian,
and Daniel Dae Kim, who is Korean American. To see men of Asian descent
playing the rivals is significant because those roles could have easily been
cast with non-Asian-American actors.
"What I find interesting about this particular film is that the three
main romantic rivals ... they’re all playing different types of
Asian-American men," said Keith Chow, creator of online pop culture website
The Nerds of Color.
The characters are seen doing activities commonly associated with Asians,
like eating dim sum or going to a Korean spa. But, there are also subtler
nods to Asian culture, like people taking off their shoes when they enter
homes.
The filmmakers strived for authenticity, like using a working dim sum
restaurant and its servers in a scene.
"It just made the experience even better," Park said.
Unlike previous mainstream rom-coms that take place in San Francisco, a
lot of the bars and restaurant scenes have plenty of Asian extras in the
background. That was something Khan was always conscious of.
"On the monitors, I would always look at each frame and just make sure
the crowd felt real, it felt authentic," Khan said.
It was also integral to Park in scenes where Marcus performs with his
band Hello Peril. After college, he performed in a largely Asian-American
band like in the movie.
"Because of that, Asian Americans came to our shows," Park said. "Just by
nature, the community comes out to support and that’s reflected in those
scenes and in reality."
Chow said he hopes the film will continue to normalize stories focused on
Asians so that they are not seen as "niche." And so Asian Americans will not
feel pressure that movies or TV shows have to be hits so that someone else’s
project can get made.
"‘Give me the confidence of a mediocre white man,’" said Chow, cribbing a
popular tweet from writer Sarah Hagi.
He added: "That’s the dream you don’t have to make the greatest work of
art of all time just to get on a network."
Park, whose TV show has been renewed for a sixth season, thinks the
window for opportunities for Asian-led stories has widened over the last few
years.
"While I’ve been in this business, there’s always been a belief that
there wasn’t an audience for these types of stories or these types of
stories weren’t relatable to a wider audience. I think at this point we’ve
proven that they are," Park said. "That’s a big step. We still have a long
way to go and hopefully we’ll get there."
Terry Tang is a member of The AP’s race and ethnicity team.
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