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Joy Luck Club, the | 
enlarge | Director: Wayne Wang Actors: Kieu Chinh, Tsai Chin, France Nuyen, Lisa Lu, Ming-na Studio: Buena Vista Category: Video
List Price: CDN$ 11.99 Buy Used: CDN$ 0.01 You Save: CDN$ 11.98 (100%)
Used (5) from CDN$ 0.01
Rating: 91 reviews Sales Rank: 335
Format: Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: R (Restricted) Media: VHS Tape Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 4.2 x 1.1
ISBN: 6303022901 UPC: 765362291038 EAN: 9786303022901
Theatrical Release Date: 1993 Release Date: June 4, 2002 Availability: Usually ships within 1 - 2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Save a tree, buy from Green Earth Books. Ships from USA; Allow 2 to 3 weeks for delivery. All books guaranteed. Read -> Recycle -> Reuse
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| Editorial Reviews:
From Amazon.com The 1993 film adaptation of Amy Tan's bestselling novel is both a delight and a moving experience, an anthology of stories wrapped in one Chinese-American woman's journey to understand her roots. Wayne Wang (Eat a Bowl of Tea) directs a large, outstanding cast spread over eight different tales of the lives of Chinese women, most of them set in the past. The script by Tan and Ronald Bass (Rain Man) is a delicate balance of emotions that swell but don't gush, and Wang brings impressive texture and a personal feel to Tan's descriptions of daily life in the Chinese-American community. This sprawling, good-looking movie makes for a cathartic tearjerker one can feel good about. --Tom Keogh
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| Customer Reviews: Read 86 more reviews...
This is not only about being Chinese July 3, 2004 Plenty of people have pointed out the movie's good points but beyond the mother - daughter theme that is so wonderfully dealt with, this movie is also about the immigrant experience. In this world today, so many people immigrate and must contend with the difficult process of watching their children grow up in another culture - wonderful, different, distant, restive - and they have to figure out how to connect with their children. "Joy Luck Club" portrays this poignantly. How many children of refugees really have any idea what their parents went through? Many people from a variety of cultures will appreciate the film for that reason alone. As for those who say Tan is "male-bashing", keep in mind the very loving character of June's father. Also, if you've read Tan's other books, (The Kitchen God's Wife, for example), there are both good and bad men with great depth of character. Let's remember, too, that history is not exactly littered with the stories of women, and Tan is just trying to rectify that imbalance. Having lived in Asia for 8 years, I'd say that male privilege is still alive and well...and in support of Tan's story, the (lack of) legal rights of women alone in pre-war China should illustrate the possiblity that four women might have had such experiences.
A great movie from a story by a wonderful writer May 2, 2004 Joseph H Pierre (Salem, OR USA)
Having spent a year in China (1948), I admit to a soft spot for the Chinese people and their stories, and especially for Amy Tan, whose books I have read and loved. This superlative movie was based on her book of the same name.
In this story (the script was written by Tan and Ronald Bass) the tension between four Chinese women, who were born in China and later came to the United States, and their Americanized daughters, is the foundation of the story, and is the theme that epitomizes Amy Tan's stories. She has noted in an interview that such tension existed in her own life between her and her own mother. Much of the tension is due to the cultural clash. Times in China were hard a few short decades ago, and life was harsh. Starvation and disease was rife even in later years, when I was there in the late 'forties. When Americans today refer to poverty or hunger in this country, they have no conception of the real poverty and hunger that existed in China in the 'thirties and 'forties, or customs like the very painful historical binding of women's feet, which in effect crippled them for life, in the name of beauty, or the custom of wealthy Chinese men often having multiple wives and concubines, or the total degradation of women which existed and was totally accepted throughout the culture. Not to mention the impact of continuing warfare between warlords, the nationalists (Kuomintang) and communists, and the Japanese occupation all of which lasted for generations. This is an emotion evoking story. It is more than simply entertainment; it is a story with which you will identify, with characters with which you will empathize. Amy Tan knows whereof she writes, and her stories are compelling and sympathy evoking. Another Chinese woman who wrote her autobiography which touched on some of the same themes, who was in Tsingtao when I was, and whose tale enchanted me, was Dr. H. Mei Lu, who now lives in Honolulu, and whose book was titled, "Grandfather's Microscope" q.v. Coming from a humble background, in China, she became an esteemed pathologist in the United States. I heartily recommend her book as well as Amy Tan's, for any Sinophile. These ladies both write extremely well, and have immensely interesting things to say. Joseph (Joe) Pierre, USN (Ret)
author of The Road to Damascus and other books
what a shame February 18, 2004 Jane Z. when i read the book as a little girl, i thought that it was wonderful...yet, some things should be marked "handled with care" when being made into movies.... this movie was a HUGE disappointment. the actors themselves were wonderful, but they had little to work with.... by skipping many parts and changing others, they've basically lost a big part of the book. it's gone from a touching reflection of the lives of chinese women to just plain cheap sensation. sure the story was "touching enough".....but WHAT a disappointment. but hey, what can i say? it was a long book. and some things are too complex for the 2-D movie screen.
Wonderful! September 14, 2003 Joanneva12a (USA) This tearjerker adaptation based on the book by Amy Tan, is about four Chinese mothers and their American born daughters, and how the distinct cultural chasm in their upbringing, play into their daily lives.The flashbacks into the young lives of each mother is masterful storytelling filled with rich imagery. But it is the everyday struggles of modern life with their daughters and the conflicts between them that most will easily recognize. In this way the movie does not exclude the general viewer from identifying with their own personal relationships with their mother, spouse, or friends. This is one of the best technically engineered movies I have ever seen. The way in which the lives of the characters are weaved together is nothing short of genuis, and the movie slides flawlessly from the present to the past and back to the present again The story of each mother's youth is both heartbreaking and wonderful at the same time, and with their somewhat broken english offer up an amazing amount of simple yet profound statements and insights as they tell their story and try to impart upon their daughters wisdom gained through both suffering and sacrifice. The modern day entanglements of each daughter and their often tense relationships with their moms, show us in the end that no matter who we are, or where we come from, the bond between a mother and daughter is often a complex enigma, full of conflicting emotions. Throughout all this, the main underlying issue is the trip to China one of the daughters is about to embark on, to meet for the first time, two sisters previously abandoned in wartime China while at the same time paying a personal tribute to her own mother. If I had to flaw the movie it would be the constant onslaught on one?s emotions right up until the very end. Nevertheless, I still give it 5 stars although I am sure this movie will appeal more to women. FAVORITES MOVIE QUOTES: "..and on that day, second wife's hair began to turn white" "All around me I see the signs. My daughter looks but does not see. This is a house that will break into pieces" "But Lena had no spirit, ..because I had none to give her" "I like being tragic mom... I learned it from you"
ONE OF THE GREATEST FILMS.... November 2, 2002 Mr. Wynn (State of Confusion) This is one of the greatest films to examine mother-daughter relationships. It is also a great film that examines how a women are treated in different cultures. It is a very full film. It covers all the bases.The flashbacks are very smooth and everything interlocks with all the storylines. The acting is superb. It is very genuine. This is a must-see for every person that appreciates good films.
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