2023 New York Asian Film Festival Unveils Special Guests, Award Honorees, Centerpiece Selection and More
Tickets go on sale this Friday at 12pm ET for the 22nd edition of the New York Asian Film Festival (NYAFF), presented by the New York Asian Film Foundation and Film at Lincoln Center (FLC), running from July 14–30, 2023 at FLC, with a special weekend of screenings (July 21–23) at a new venue, the historic Barrymore Film Center in Fort Lee, New Jersey, the birthplace of the motion picture industry in America.
The 22nd edition will include eight world premieres, nine international premieres, thirty-two North American premieres, three U.S. premieres, and sixteen East Coast/New York premieres, showcasing the most exciting new action, comedy, drama, thriller, romance, horror, and art-house films from Hong Kong, Japan, China, South Korea, the Philippines, Malaysia, Indonesia, Taiwan, Thailand, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Singapore, Vietnam, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
NYAFF is pleased to unveil the nine wildly diverse and remarkable titles nominated for this year’s Uncaged Award for Best Feature Film Competition, which shines a spotlight on feature filmmakers whose singular cinematic visions should be internationally heralded, and celebrates their passion, imagination, and willingness to take risks.The winner of the Uncaged Award will be selected by a jury, composed of prominent figures from the film industry bridging Asia and the United States, to be announced.
The Uncaged Award nominees are: The Abandoned (Tseng Ying-ting, Taiwan), a masterful blend of police procedural with psychological themes and social issues, as a female cop pursues a serial killer; Abang Adik (Jin Ong, Malaysia), a raw, neorealist drama about two immigrant brothers whose unshakeable bond is sorely tried by an unspeakable act; Back Home (Nate Ki, Hong Kong), a hallucinogenic horror opus in which a young man who can see ghosts returns to his childhood home and is trapped in a waking nightmare; Faces of Anne (Rasiguet Sookkarn and Kongdej Jaturanrasmee, Thailand), a horror thriller that examines, in high-concept fashion, profound and daunting questions about identity and the meaning of life; Flaming Cloud (Liu Siyi, China), an exquisite homage to Disney movies and Chinese folklore in which a young man embarks on a phantasmagorical journey; Greenhouse (Lee Sol-hui, South Korea), a gripping, slow-burn drama-cum-thriller about a woman whose plans to be reunited with her son are shockingly upended; Home Sweet Home (Takumi Saitoh, Japan), a sublime horror story in which the perfect family buys the perfect house, only to discover that it is not; Mountain Onion (Eldar Shibanov, Kazakhstan), a hilariously offbeat family comedy in which two resourceful siblings embark on a journey to save their parents’ failing marriage; and Redemption with Life (Zhang Wei, China), a dark meditation on capitalistic corruption in which classic codes of honor and loyalty are put to the ultimate test.
The NYAFF 2023 Centerpiece Film is the International Premiere of Lee Byeong-heon’s Dream, one of the year’s most highly anticipated blockbusters, with the director in attendance. Both pulse-raising and heartwarming, the story is inspired by the real-life Korean team that participated in the 2010 Homeless World Cup, featuring South Korea’s superstar Park Seo-jun as a virtuoso soccer player-turned-coach and K-pop sensation Lee Ji-eun, best known to the world as IU, as cynical producer.
NYAFF’s 2023 Lifetime Achievement Award will go to maverick filmmaker Junji Sakamoto, a singular writer-director who has primarily worked outside Japan’s studio system and challenged himself to do something utterly different with each film. Even after 30 films, five of them shot partially overseas, he continues to produce surprising work that shares little more with his earlier titles than a male-centric focus, sumptuous visuals, provocative characters, and a humanist heart. Since his debut nearly 35 years ago, Sakamoto has genre-hopped with enviable dexterity and no fear of controversial topics, creating work that is both bold and poetic, including Face (2000), KT (2002), Children of the Dark (NYAFF 2008), The Projects (2016), Ernesto (2017), and My Brother, the Android and Me (2022). He will appear at NYAFF with his latest masterwork, the jidaigeki eco-fable Okiku and the World.
Inaugurated last year, NYAFF’s 2023 Best from the East Award honors a singularly outstanding performance in a film, and this year, the award is being bestowed on Korean actress-musician Lee Hanee, star of NYAFF’s Opening Film, Killing Romance. Lee’s absolutely dazzling comedic performance as a former superstar whose would-be dream marriage takes her to the depths of an existential hell and back proves the actress an unstoppable force of nature. Also not to be missed is her turn as a total badass (who may or may not be a spy) busting heads and taking names in Lee Hae-young’s Phantom. She will be on hand late in the festival to receive her award and introduce the screenings of both films. A beauty queen, taekwondo black belt, scuba diver, competitive skier, prodigy of traditional Korean music, and Goodwill Ambassador, Lee was a television host and musical theater star before embarking on her illustrious career as a film and TV actress in 2009. Recent highlights include her star turns in megahit Extreme Job (2019), Black Money (2019), and her role in NYAFF 2022 closing film, Alienoid (2022).
As previously announced, the 2023 Screen International Rising Star Asia Award goes to Japanese star Ryohei Suzuki, many of whose films have been screened at NYAFF in the past. The busy actor first earned international attention for his role in HK: Forbidden Super Hero (NYAFF 2013), as well as Tokyo Tribe (NYAFF 2015) and One Night (NYAFF 2019). His performance in Last of the Wolves (NYAFF 2021) won him Best Supporting Actor accolades at the Japan Academy Prize, among many others. He will be on stage for the award ceremony and a Q&A for his latest film, Egoist.
NYAFF’s 2023 Daniel A. Craft Award for Excellence in Action Cinema will go to wunderkind Thai filmmaker Lee Thongkham for his outrageous action movie sendup Kitty the Killer, an anarchic tale of female assassins that goes for the jugular with gleeful abandon. He started Thongkham Films during the throes of the pandemic, directing its inaugural feature, The Maid (2020). The gonzo horror movie became the first Thai Netflix Original Film. Lee next directed the Thai-Chinese kaiju movie, The Lake (2022). He then produced the insane slasher satire Night of the Killer Bears (2023). Thongkham Films has already proven a production powerhouse with several more ambitious projects in the pipeline.
Also previously announced, actor and producer Louis Koo, one of Hong Kong’s biggest stars, is being honored with NYAFF’s Extraordinary Star Asia Award. Koo will be on stage for the award ceremony, as well as to introduce his new heart-thumping lifesaving drama Vital Signs.He also appears with compatriot legends Aaron Kwok and Sean Lau for the first time on the big screen in genre maestro Herman Yau’s The White Storm 3: Heaven or Hell. Making its North American premiere at NYAFF, the latest entry of the hit franchise ratchets up the gonzo action while blurring the lines between good and evil.
NYAFF is delighted to welcome even more creative forces from across Asia and the diaspora to meet the audience in New York: singer-dancer-actor Anson Kong, a member of Cantopop supergroup Mirror and star of Uncaged Competition film Back Home, along with the film’s director, Nate Ki; actor Gong Myoung, who showcases his versatile ability in_ Killing Romance after starring in TV series Lovers of the Red Sky_ and blockbuster Extreme Job. Japanese star Takumi Saitoh, director of the Uncaged Competition film Home Sweet Home; Rebound director Chang Hang-jun; Kwak Eun-mi, director of A Tour Guide, about a young North Korean defector; Anastasia Tsang, director of the love letter to nighttime Hong Kong, A Light Never Goes Out; Wanweaw Hongvivatana and Weawwan Hongvivatana, directors of Thai teen romance You & Me & Me; director Isher Sahota and producer Jon Tarcy with their hilarious diasporic film, The Effects of Lying; Laha Mebow, Taiwan’s first indigenous female director; Philippines director Quark Henares and actress EJ Jallorina with Where Is the Lie?; and Eunice Lau, director of the hard-hitting documentary A-Town Boyz..
NYAFF will celebrate opening night on July 14 with its beloved Opening Night Market Soirée, featuring live music and Asian food stalls serving scrumptious delights. The Monday Matsuri to Midnight event takes place all afternoon and evening on July 24, with screenings of Japanese films, Japanese music, and Japanese delicacies.
Masterclasses with filmmakers and panels, including the Asian Diaspora Filmmaker Forum, a panel discussion bringing together producers, directors to share their experiences in the film industry and offer insight into their creative processes, participants to be announced.
NYAFF Closing Night will conclude this year’s festival with a fabulous awards ceremony and the world premiere of a new all-star family-friendly animation blockbuster, to be revealed in a future announcement.
The New York Asian Film Festival is co-presented by the New York Asian Film Foundation and Film at Lincoln Center. It takes place from July 14–30, 2023 at FLC’s Walter Reade Theater (165 West 65th Street), and July 21–23 at Barrymore Film Center (153 Main Street, Fort Lee, NJ). It is curated by executive director Samuel Jamier, associate director Claire Marty, and programmers David Wilentz, Karen Severns, Koichi Mori, and Jenny Lin.
FULL LINEUP (78 films)
(Please note the program is still subject to change.)
OPENING FILM
CENTERPIECE FILM
OUTDOOR FILM
CLOSING FILM
BEYOND BORDERS
Films that tell stories about characters confronting different cultures
CROWD PLEASERS
Films that captivate, comfort, and cheer
DIASPORIC DISCOVERIES
Films that blur the clear-cut lines of East-West identities
FRONTLINES
Films grounded in the lives of those in marginalized communities, with narratives that examine pressing issues
GENRE MASTERS
Innovative new work that tweaks and twists genre conventions
NEXT/NOW
Highlighting emerging voices and promising works by up-and-coming directors
STANDOUTS
Exceptional films, regardless of premiere status
VANGUARDS
Original films that break away from formalistic and/or narrative conventions
FILMMAKER IN FOCUS: ZHANG WEI
UNCAGED AWARD FOR BEST FEATURE FILM COMPETITION
SHORTS: SHORTS SHOWCASE – ANIMATION
SHORTS: SHORTS SHOWCASE – LIVE ACTION
NYAFF TICKET PRICING AND INFO
Tickets for the 22nd edition of the New York Asian Film Festival go on sale Friday at 12pm ET, with early access for FLC Members beginning at 10am ET. Tickets are $17 for General Public; $14 for students, seniors (62+), and persons with disabilities; and $12 for FLC Members. See more at FLC and save with a 3+ Film Package or FLC All-Access Passes ($249 for General Public and $199 for students). Note: Opening Night and premium events are excluded.
Opening Night tickets for _Killing Romance _are $25 for the General Public and $20 for FLC Members, students, seniors, and persons with disabilities. Those who wish to attend the Opening Night screening and the Night Market can get tickets for $50 for the General Public and $40 for FLC Members, students, seniors, and persons with disabilities.
Premium events––including screenings of Killing Romance, Egoist, Home Sweet Home, Vital Signs, Phantom, and Closing Night film (to be announced)––are $25 for the General Public and $20 for FLC Members, students, seniors, and persons with disabilities.
Standard-priced screenings at NYAFF are eligible for the FLC Dinner + Movie combo. For $30, receive one ticket to an NYAFF screening and a select menu item at Café Paradiso, located in FLC’s Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center. Learn more here.