Model Minority (FILM REVIEW)
Model Minority
Film Review
by Kam Williams
Dysfunctional Family Drama Revolves around Interracial Romance
16 year-old Kayla Tanaka (Nichole
Bloom) is an aspiring artist with a promising future provided she keeps her
nose to the grindstone while trying to land a college scholarship. But that’s
easier said than done since she’s being raised in a rough area of Los Angeles where
temptation lurks around every corner.
So, one might expect her parents to
approve when she starts dating an equally-ambitious classmate (Robert Bailey,
Jr.) from the other side of the proverbial tracks whose father is a successful,
Harvard-trained lawyer. But no, Kayla’s mother, Angie (Jessica Tuck), puts the
kibosh on the liaison just as soon as she discovers that the object of her
affection is African-American, ordering her daughter to “Get the [F-word] out
of the house” because “you’re sneaking around with a Goddamn [N-word].”
Unfortunately, it only falls on deaf
ears when Kayla points out that her white mother’s been in an interracial
relationship with a Japanese man (Chris Tashima) for the past 22 years. Their
marital status is about to change however, because Mrs. Tanaka has a terrible
drug addiction that’s frustrated her husband to the point of moving out of the
house and filing for divorce.
Between their mom’s habit and hypocrisy,
it is only a matter of time until both Kayla and her younger sister, Amberlyn
(Courtney Mun), rebel by hanging out with black guys anyway. Trouble is their new
suitors aren’t straitlaced like J.J., but stone-cold ghetto gangstas with not
much of a future to speak of.
Kayla’s lover, Treyshawn (Delon de
Metz), is a 19 year-old drug dealer with his own car, while her sibling can be
found hanging out in alleys swapping sexual favors for Chinese food. In the
absence of a stable home life, the question soon becomes, can these girls be
saved before spiraling totally out of control?
So unfolds Model Minority, a
dysfunctional family drama marking a most impressive directorial/scriptwriting
debut of Lily Mariye. An accomplished actress in her own right, Ms. Mariye is
perhaps best known for portraying Nurse Lily Jarvik on the TV series ER.
Here, she proves to be quite the
storyteller, spinning a quite compelling, cross-cultural, character-driven
drama with its finger on the pulse. Considerable credit must also go to Nichole
Bloom (Project X) for throwing herself into the emotionally-challenging role of
Kayla with an admirable abandon.
A melting pot morality play about the
temptations and travails of a couple of good girls gone bad.
Excellent
(4 stars)
Unrated
Running time: 94 minutes
Distributor: Nice
Girls Films
To see a trailer for Model
Minority, visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPDPzl-DhOQ
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