By Lynn Venhaus
A modern re-imagining of Ang Lee’s first 1993 breakthrough film, “The Wedding Banquet” is a funny, charming queer family romantic comedy about personal growth, making a home, and your chosen family becoming your real family.

The story is about a gay man (Han-Gi Chan), hoping to stay in the U.S., proposes a green card marriage to a female friend (Kelly Marie Tran) in exchange for paying for her IVF treatment. However, things soon get complicated when his grandmother (Youn Yuh-Jung) surprises them with plans for an extravagant Korean wedding banquet.

It’s safe to say much of society has changed towards more acceptance of same-sex couples in the three decades since Lee and his screenwriter James Schamus imagined a green-card marriage between a gay bride and groom, noting marriage equality and LGBTQ rights achieved since 1993.

This remake has many things it wants to say through writer-director Andrew Ahn, who also teamed up with Shamus for this version. Ahn, an L.A. filmmaker whose previous film “Fire Island” also starred Bowen Yang, was a summer vacation rom com inspired by Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice.”

Bowen Yang, Han Gi-Chun, Kelly Marie Tran, Lily Gladstone.

The cast is all aces-high, with Joan Chen, ‘Minari’ Oscar winner Youn Yuh-Jung, Oscar nominee Lily Gladstone, Emmy nominee Yang, Kelly Maria Tran and newcomer Ha Gi-Chan endearing characters you can relate to through a modern lens.

As the two same-sex couples, Tran, Gladstone, Yang and G-Chan nimbly play complicated Millennials and give us enough genuine emotion to make a connection.

Lee, the Taiwanese filmmaker who has won two Oscars for directing “Brokeback Mountain” and “The Life of Pi,” was considered a legitimate talent after his “The Wedding Banquet” was both Oscar-nominated and won the Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival, the first of his two (no one else has achieved that). It was also his first film to release theatrically in the U.S. (Fun fact: He has an undergraduate degree from University of Illinois).

Fast-forward 32 years, and the Ahn-Schamus American remake collaboration still concerns cultural friction and a sham marriage ceremony — only it’s South Korea and not Taiwan as the immigrants’ home country, they’ve shifted the action from New York City to Seattle, and they’ve increased the involved couples from one to two.

Bowen Yang, Han Gi-Chun,

Min (Gi-Chan) and Chris (Yang) have been in a five-year relationship and live in the garage of their good friends Angela (Tran) and Lee (Gladstone), who live in Lee’s family home. They would like a child and have tried IVF twice with Lee. Angela doesn’t want to carry the baby, for she has an overbearing mother (Chen), and she frets about what kind of parent she’d be. Chris and Angela became good friends in college.

Min has family money, but his grandmother Ja-Young (Yuh-Jung) is not happy with his reluctance to join the family business – a multinational corporation, and with his student visa about to expire, is making demands.

The pair hatch this scheme — Min will pay for the IVF again if Angela marries him, basically helping both couples — but it becomes more complicated when Min’s grandmother shows up.

As played by the wonderful character actress Youn Yuh-jung, who won an Oscar as the grandmother in “Minari,” Min’s grandmother Ja-Young steals every scene she’s in, and will also break your heart as she reveals confidences to her grandson. After all, Yuh-jung has five decades’ worth of film credits.

Kelly Marie Tran, Lily Gladstone

The characters could all easily have been one-note, but the performers provide unexpected layers, while also crowd-pleasing with broad laughs. OK, it may be cliché, but the scene where they “de-queer” the girls’ home is very funny, especially when Yang is shown taking down a framed Lilith Fair poster.

While one can easily predict “all’s well that ends well” after mishaps and complications arise, yet there are some sweet surprises that await.

“The Wedding Banquet” may have some clunky moments, awkward baggage, and appear not svelte enough in its execution, but one can feel its sincerity, its concern over Asian-American representation, and appreciate its lovable cast.

“The Wedding Banquet” is a 2025 romantic comedy directed by Andrew Ahn and starring Kelly Marie Tran, Lily Gladstone, Bowen Yang, Han Gi-Chun, Joan Chen and Youn Yuh-Jung. Its runtime is and it is rated R for language and some sexual material/nudity. It opened in theatres on April 18, became available on premium VOD May 13, and will stream on Paramount + beginning Sept. 8. Lynn’s Grade: B.

Kelly Marie Tran, Lily Gladstone, Han Gi-Chun, Bowen Yang.

By Lynn Venhaus

A dazzling spectacle based on the 2003 Broadway musical fantasy, “Wicked” is overproduced and padded with unnecessarily stretched out musical numbers and extended scenes to present the popular culture phenomenon as only the first act in a 2 hour, 30-minute film.

After years in development, this long-awaited adaptation surely could have been pruned without affecting the story arc. The second act, “Wicked: Part II,” is set for a Nov. 21, 2025, release. Did it need to be this long? No. Is it worth your time? Yes.

With ‘wow factor’ production values and sensational performances, this vivid re-imagining of the Land of Oz is a must-see event best-suited for the big screen.

After opening Oct. 30, 2003, on Broadway, the beloved musical captured theatregoers’ fancy with its imaginative and sharp-witted story about the unlikely friendship between the Glinda the Good Witch of the North and Elphaba the Wicked Witch of the West. It draws from the familiar mythology based on the classic 1939 film “The Wizard of Oz” and L. Frank Baum’s series of 14 novels written between 1901-1917.

However, it is a prequel to those events, and takes place, for the most part, before farmgirl Dorothy Gale arrives from Kansas. But ‘Wicked,’ you see, is only a perception, and a misunderstood one at that. This inspired take fascinates with the green-skinned outcast Elphaba attending Shiz University, where she is taken on an unusual path, which leads to discovering her magical powers, and develops a bond with her mean-girl opportunist roommate Glinda, first known as “Galinda.”

As college students, the pair are exact opposite in looks, temperament, personality and values. Loosely based on Gregory Maguire’s 1995 novel, the screenplay is adapted by Winnie Holzman, the original musical book writer, who smartly gave us so much to ponder, and and Dana Fox, whose most recent credit is “Cruella.” Holzman created the TV series “My So-Called Life” and wrote for the landmark TV series “thirtysomething” and “Once and Again.”

The centerpiece is the glorious songs – those heartfelt, soaring, beautifully crafted numbers from virtuoso composer-lyricist Stephen Schwartz. He started his acclaimed five-decade career with “Godspell” in 1970, and has gone on to create “Pippin,” “Children of Eden,” “The Hunchback of Notre Dame,” “The Prince of Egypt,” and win an Oscar for “Colors of the Wind” from “Pocahontas.” This is arguably his masterpiece.

The film’s biggest strength is its perfectly cast triple-threat performers – Cynthia Erivo as Elphaba Thropp, Ariana Grande-Butera as Glinda Upland and Jonathan Bailey as Fiyero Tigelaar, a handsome prince whose subplot is best not spoiled.

Erivo’s knockout voice is her superpower. She won a Tony Award in 2016 as Celie in “The Color Purple” revival, the only non “Hamilton” cast member to win a musical acting trophy that year. She proves herself to be a gifted actress, as she leans into sympathetic Elphaba’s differences as a proud badge of honor, especially in her newfound activism against injustice.

Grande has sold more than 90 million records as a pop star and appeared on Nickelodeon and Broadway. If you’ve seen Grande host “Saturday Night Live,” you know she has terrific comic timing and unforced charm. As a singer, she has a four-octave vocal range and in this role, she inhabits the spoiled rich girl with a self-deprecating humor. She looks dainty, but there’s an intriguing power and intelligence behind the bubbly façade.

The charismatic Bailey, Emmy-nominated for “Fellow Travelers,” is known as the oldest son Anthony in the “Bridgerton” TV series, but in England, he is also an accomplished musical theater performer. He won an Olivier Award as Best Supporting Actor in a Musical for playing Jamie in the revival of “Company” in 2018. Fleet-footed and a nimble vocalist, he gives Fiyero an allure that wasn’t initially apparent on stage. (Fun fact: St. Louis’ own Norbert Leo Butz, two-time Tony winner, originated the role in its San Francisco tryout and on Broadway).

Outstanding in supporting roles are Jeff Goldblum as the morally compromised Wizard of Oz, who handles “A Sentimental Man” quite nicely, Michelle Yeoh as no-nonsense Shiz headmistress Madame Morrible, and Peter Dinklage, in a voice-over, as an animal professor, Dr. Dillamond, who’s frightened in “Something Bad,” tipping us off to sinister political forces (shades of authoritarianism and fascism ahead).

There are more-to-develop turns by Ethan Slater as Boq Woodsman, a Munchkin in love with Glinda, and Marissa Bode as Nessarose, Elphaba’s paraplegic younger sister. Slater was Tony-nominated and won a Drama Desk Award for his role as SpongeBob SquarePants in the 2017 Broadway musical. Stay tuned for some interesting twists with these two in Act 2.

New roles include Glinda’s fawning sycophants — Bowen Yang of SNL fame is Pfannee and Bronwyn James of CBS’ “Ghosts” is ShenShen.

As one who has seen the stage musical seven times, with an inaugural voyage to Chicago for the first national tour in May 2005 and the remainder at the Fabulous Fox in St. Louis, the film is faithful to the source material. (BTW, “Wicked” is considered “St. Louis’ favorite musical” after record-breaking runs here).

“One Short Day” is a grand introduction to the breathtaking art-deco Emerald City, Erivo’s emotional gravitas is displayed in “I’m Not That Girl,” and her humorous duet with Grande on a crisply delivered “What Is This Feeling?” is a highlight. Grande also shines in the peppy “Popular,” her signature song.

But the dramatic opener “No One Mourns the Wicked,” a too-heavy CGI-enhanced “The Wizard and I,” and an acrobatic “Dancing Through Life” set on library staircases are overstuffed. The choreography is in the contemporary style of elaborate and athletic dance moves with distinctive razzle-dazzle that is mega-staged for maximum effect.

That said, the defining showstopper, “Defying Gravity,” is everything you want it to be, an enthralling way to end, just before the curtain comes down on stage, but here with a “To be continued” card stunning the audience who doesn’t realize it’s only half.

Now the fourth longest-running musical of all-time, “Wicked” continues to draw packed houses in theaters around the world. While plans for a film adaptation started in 2012, the project did not kick off in earnest until 2021.

Jonathan M. Chu was hired to direct, after his successes with “Step Up 2 In the Streets,” “Step Up 3D,” “Crazy Rich Asians” and “In the Heights.” That was when it was decided to split the film into two parts to “meet the demands of the story’s epic scope and to expand upon the journeys of and relationships between the characters, without cutting any songs and major plot points” (I quote press here).

The second half is when more dark secrets and identities will be revealed, and features the moving “For Good” number. (No spoiler alert here, nor will I reveal cameos).

Highlights of Part 1 include the magnificent costume designs by Paul Tazewell, Tony Award winner for “Hamilton.” He must be the frontrunner for year-end awards, for each intricate outfit is stunning in detail.

The visual effects, while often over-the-top, are eye-popping. With today’s audiences conditioned for blockbuster franchise films, such as the Marvel Cinematic Universe, Harry Potter series, and new “Star Wars” chapters, these are the flamboyant excesses people expect, but I find them overdone.

The everlasting appeal of “Wicked” will always be as a timeless tale of love and friendship, and its brilliant way of presenting the proverbial “two sides to every story.” Those who cherish the musical can find moments to savor.

“Wicked” is a 2024 musical fantasy directed by Jon Chu and starring Cynthia Erivo, Ariana Grande-Butera, Jonathan Bailey, Jeff Goldblum, Michelle Yeoh, Ethan Slater, Marissa Bode, Bowen Yang and Bronwyn James. It is rated PG for some scary action, thematic material and brief suggestive material, and its runtime is 2 hours, 40 minutes. It opens in theatres Nov. 22. Lynn’s Grade: B+