Green Dragon Movie Review
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Cast & Crew
Director : Timothy Linh Bui
Producer : Tony Bui, Andrew Stevens, Elie Samaha, Tajamika Paxton,
Screenwriter : Timothy Linh Bui
Starring : Patrick Swayze, Forrest Whitaker, Don Duong, Trung Nguyen, Hiep Thi Le, Billing Tran, Long Nguyen,
Helming the project are brothers Timothy Lihn Bui (director/screenwriter) and Tony Bui (story/producer), previously responsible for the Harvey Keitel film Three Seasons. For Green Dragon, the film uses a refugee camp as purgatory for the Vietnamese people and constructs a vivid backdrop for examining the attitudes and actions of a displaced people forging new lives.
From the opening shot of a small Vietnamese boy named Minh Pham (Trung Nguyen) stepping precariously over sleeping bodies into the bright sunshine, with an American flag billowing in the background, the film is just blatant in its intentions. Through Minh's eyes and actions during his daily search in the camp for his lost mother, we are introduced to a variety of individuals currently housed at one of the four main refugee camps - Camp Pendelton - including Minh's guilt-ridden uncle Tai Tran (Don Duong), guilt-ridden camp commander Jim Lance (Patrick Swayze), and melancholy volunteer camp cook Addie (Forest Whitaker). Guilt is rampant.
The characters, at best, stand as stereotypical effigies of general American society of the era. Swayze, who's currently undergoing a strange career resurgence since last year's Donnie Darko, handles the role of Lance - the guilty conscience of the American people over the defeat of Vietnam - with stoicism, but he lacks the conviction to generate any sympathy or interest. Whitaker's character of Addie carries the heaviest moments of the film and provides a wonderful support system for the character of Minh, but he too feels packaged and antiseptic. On the other hand, the performance of Don Duong is one of the film's highlights.
Despite an excruciatingly slow pace and the absence of any real drama, the film does develop an engaging exploration of the Vietnamese people after the destruction of their homeland. At times, the film injects a bit too much flag-waving patriotism, nor does it really explore the racial injustices faced by the refugees after their release from the camps. In the end, the film feels homogenized and a bit contrived, as if we're looking back at a tattered and ugly past with rose-tinted glasses.
Dirty dancing dragon.
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