Release date: November 10, 2020 (U.S. Debut)
Running time: 90 minutes
Starring: Kim Chi, Isaac, Vu T. Le Thi, Lien Binh Phat
Director: Leon Le
Writers: Leon Le, Minh Ngoc Nguyen
An unlikely bond forms between an underground debt collector and a cai luong "Vietnamese opera" performer against the backdrop of Saigon in the 90s.
Song Lang is a slow burning film but one that does a great job of telling this story and establishing the characters. The film follows two main men, who seem very different but over time learn that they have more similarities than meets the eye. Dung (Lien Binh Phat) is a debt enforcer who has the unenviable job of making people pay back for high interest loans that they take out. He has become numb to this work and treats and the brutality that it requires. Linh Phung (Isaac) is a talented opera performer whose family took out a debt that has to be collected by Dung. But when the two cross paths, they form an unlikely friendship that will challenge both of their preconceptions about each other.
This film has a really good setting. It spends a lot of time establishing this area and the characters, giving you a solid backstory before introducing you to the main conflict. And the conflicted protagonist is wonderfully complex. The film portrays him as a brutal enforcer but also starts to drop hints that there is more to him than meets the eyes. And when Dung and Linh start to interact, a lot of the heart of the film comes through. Their interactions are fun to see and really emphasize the idea that people are far more complex than we give them credit for. They each have sides that they rarely show and interests that would surprise a casual observer. And because Linh is an opera singer, you also get some fantastic scenes of the opera itself. Not only do you get some great performances, but you also get some behind the scenes shots that show how the opera actually works.
And the film also has a lot of little touches that appealed to me. There is a scene where classic video games are played that helped me relate to the characters and their interests. And there is some fighting, especially because Dung is an enforcer, that adds some much needed action to this otherwise wonderfully slow drama. I was expecting more action during this film, but was not disappointed by the slower, more heartfelt film that I found. And the story of this movie is moving and wonderful. It is an interesting one with themes of redemption and trying to rise above your lot in life. And it is one that will appeal to anyone that has had a dream and tried to pursue it.
Song Lang has two wonderfully conflicted characters and an interesting, nuanced story that tells a tale of friendship, judgment, and redemption.
Watch it.
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