Better Luck Tomorrow Movie Review
Better Luck Tomorrow Review

"Better Luck Tomorrow" Overview

Rating: NR
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : Justin LinProducer : Julie Asato,Ernesto Foronda,Justin Lin
Screenwiter : Ernesto Foronda,Justin Lin,Fabian Marquez
Starring : Parry Shen,Jason J. Tobin,Sung Kang,Roger Fan,John Cho,Karin Anna Cheung,Jerry Mathers
No parents appear in Justin Lin’s penetrating debut Better Luck Tomorrow,
presumably because their Asian-American kids – seemingly responsible and
perfectionist students at the top of their class – have earned the right to
nearly limitless freedom. Their absence, however, is persistently felt, as the
very freedom these privileged and gifted kids enjoy is also a detrimental form
of parental neglect. Left to their own devices, overachievers Ben (Parry Shen),
Virgil (Jason J. Tobin), Han (Sung Kang), and Daric (Roger Fan) find that the
only outlet for their increasing boredom and rampant egotism is to plunge
themselves into a life of financially lucrative and dangerous hustling, theft,
and drug dealing. Their cocky gambles turn them into kings of the high school
castle, and as their crime spree assumes near mythic proportions – they soon
become known as the “Chinese Mafia” – their sense of moral boundaries
disappears like the dead body they’ve buried in a friend’s backyard.
Lin’s assured and electric tale of good kids gone bad might be just another
run-of-the-mill exercise in flashy adolescent nihilism were it not for the
cleverly atypical way in which he confronts the material. By setting his film
in a nondescript affluent California neighborhood and focusing on
Asian-American characters who have their lives totally under control, the
director finds a new avenue into the rather tired realm of suburban exposes
uncovering the angst and anger lying just beneath the communities’ cheery and
docile facades. Ben and his friends are, in some respects, stereotypical
well-to-do Asian-American students: studious, motivated, passive, and anonymous
amidst their predominantly white classmates. Their lives are dominated by the
single-minded desire to get into a good college, and they all work furiously at
participating in numerous extracurricular activities (working in hospitals,
playing on the basketball team, competing on the academic decathlon team) to
bolster their college applications. They’re like well-oiled machines,
robotically tearing through high school as if the only worthwhile goal in life
is a perfect GPA and early acceptance to an Ivy League school, and their
wholesomeness is humorously alluded to by Lin’s use of Jerry Mathers (aka “The
Beaver”) as Ben’s biology teacher.
Appearances are a large part of Ben’s life, even if he doesn’t consciously
realize it. Given his acumen for academics and his interest in pulling
small-time scams – at the film’s beginning, he swindles a store out of hundreds
of dollars of computer equipment – he’s soon enlisted by über-student Daric to
help write up cheat sheets for a small profit. Daric is a brash, good-looking
stud who heads virtually every after-school club, and it’s clear that his
friendship with Ben, like virtually everything he does, is completely
self-interested. Mousy Ben, eager to fit in and be seen as one of the guys, is
easily seduced by Daric and his sidekick Han’s penchant for risky behavior, all
of which goes unpunished. As Ben acutely notes, “Good grades were our alibis,
our passports to freedom.”
As their reputation grows and more lucrative scams fall into their laps, the
group loses all sense of proportion – stealing computers from school becomes
the gateway activity to large-scale heists, lavish pseudo-orgy parties, and
dealing – not to mention using – drugs. But whereas wise-cracking Virgil, cocky
Daric, and laid-back tough guy Han engage in these illicit extracurricular
activities as a means of quelling boredom, Ben’s motives remain more
complicated, centering around a desire for power and respect that isn’t earned
simply by getting good grades. He’s eager to date his pretty lab partner
Stephanie (Karin Anna Cheung), but her rich boyfriend Steve (John Cho) is an
obstacle he can’t seem to overcome. Steve, confident that Ben is no sexual or
emotional threat to his and Stephanie’s relationship, allows Ben to take his
girlfriend to the school dance. For Ben, feelings of impotence (sexual and
physical) and marginalization (he’s the token Asian-American benchwarmer on the
basketball team) are the motivating forces behind his behavior. To keep up with
his studies, after-school commitments, and criminal undertakings, Ben begins
using cocaine as a regular stimulant, and it is only after waking up on his
seventeenth birthday profusely bleeding from the nose that he realizes it may
be time to end the game.
Lin’s keen examination of suburban ennui unabashedly plays around with common
stereotypes about Asian-Americans – who, by film’s end, turn out to be more
typically American than Asian – and his testosterone-fueled direction gives the
film a jazzy kinetic energy. When Ben and Stephanie, attending the
school-sponsored dance together, continue their slow waltz around the dance
floor despite the DJ’s changeover from slow ballad to pounding house music, it’
s an adept encapsulation of how the romantic evening, for Ben, is a minor
respite from his increasingly out-of-control lifestyle. Yet for all his
directorial flashiness (including superimposed text over the action, rapid-fire
montages, and sleek slow motion), Lin wisely recognizes the need to let his
film breathe from time to time, and it is in Ben’s quieter moments alone and
with Stephanie that the film finds its own moral center. Ben and his friends
may be convinced that the world is theirs for the taking but, as Lin’s dazzling
Better Luck Tomorrow expertly reveals, the price one pays for uninhibited greed
and arrogance is mighty steep.
For more insight into this unique and strange little film, check out the DVD
commentary track, which offers thoughts from Lin and writers Ernesto Foronda
and Fabian Marquez.
Painting by the numbers.
Reviewer: Nicholas Schager




