From the daily archives:

Saturday, November 14, 2009

White on Rice

White on Rice (Director: Dave Boyle): 40-year-old Jimmy (Hiroshi Watanabe) is living with his sister and her family after his divorce, sharing bunkbeds with his young nephew, but only until he finds someone better than his ex-wife. Alas, this poten­tially funny premise is not able to sus­tain an entire film, espe­cially when none of the other char­ac­ters feel developed enough to serve as any­thing other than foils for Jimmy’s prat­falls. Not much to describe in the way of plot, either. Jimmy develops a crush on his brother-in-law’s niece, but it doesn’t go any­where. Despite crib­bing from all kinds of other com­edies (Napoleon Dynamite, a few of Wes Anderson’s films, even the little-seen Kiwi comedy Eagle vs. Shark), White on Rice never really rises above the quirk­i­ness of its moon-faced protagonist.

There are plenty of gaps in expos­i­tion as well. Jimmy is Japanese, and speaks Japanese with his sister and her hus­band who live in an American suburb, but we have no real idea whether he’s only recently moved from Japan, or whether his ex-wife lives in America too. At one point he tells a poten­tial love interest that he’s only been divorced “a few years” but it’s unlikely he’s been sleeping in his nephew’s room for that long. Much of the humour comes at Jimmy’s expense, such as his fre­quently mangled English, and although the cast is mostly Asian, I wonder if this isn’t just per­petu­ating ste­reo­types other Hollywood com­edies have traded in.

Overall, I just expected a bit more and found myself dis­ap­pointed and a bit bored by the end. The film is com­pet­ently made and, at least in Watanabe’s case, enthu­si­ast­ic­ally acted. But the script failed to deliver any sur­prises or authentic char­ac­ters. Worse than that, when it had oppor­tun­ities to sub­vert Asian ste­reo­types, instead it just milked them for the film’s few cheap laughs.

White on Rice plays today at 5:00pm at Innis Town Hall as part of the Toronto Reel Asian International Film Festival. Tickets are $12 and are avail­able at the door.

Official site of the film

6/10(6/10)

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