EU
  
You are currently viewing the European Union version of the site.
Would you like to switch to your local site?
4 MIN READ TIME

FILM

JOY RIDE

A RAUCOUS ODYSSEY OF SEX, DRUGS AND CENTURY EGGS

FILM

JOY RIDE

A RAUCOUS ODYSSEY OF SEX, DRUGS AND CENTURY EGGS

FILMS, TV, BOOKS, GAMES — ALL THE BIG RELEASES, RATED

Party on: Kat (Stephanie Hsu), Lolo (Sherry Cola), Audrey (Ashley Park) and Deadeye (Sabrina Wu) are all eyes;
Who doesn’t love massive pink cans?;
K-pop-tastic!;
Lolo gets tongue-tied.

★★★★

OUT 4 AUGUST / CERT 15 / 95 MINS

CAST Ashley Park, Sherry Cola, Stephanie Hsu, Sabrina Wu, Daniel Dae Kim, Annie Mumolo

PLOT On a high-stakes business trip to China, Audrey (Park) embarks on a tumultuous, eye-opening journey to find her birth mother.

KILLER QUOTE

“Korea’s great. There’s mukbang, soju, Hyundai, Gangnam Style, half of Charles Melton, all of Randall Park.”

DEADEYE (SABRINA WU)

IT’S BEEN A good few years since we’ve had a truly outlandish group-vacation comedy, one that has reached the scatological heights of Bridesmaids — but Joy Ride is a worthy successor. No bodily fluid, orifice or taboo is left untouched in Adele Lim’s audacious directorial debut, and though it may test your limit for gross-out humour, the film engages with more than just comedy. Come for the laughs, stay for the thoughtful deconstruction of Asian identity against a world that wants to categorise people of colour in rudimentary boxes.

As the only two Asian kids in the white suburb of White Hills, Seattle, Audrey (Ashley Park) and Lolo (Sherry Cola) become fast friends when the latter punches the local playground racist. That connection based on mutual protection carries into their adult lives: Lolo is a struggling, body-positive artist living out of Audrey’s garage; Audrey has an important work trip to China that promises a cushy promotion at her law firm, and brings Lolo along as her translator and support system. Also joining the ride are Lolo’s cousin Deadeye (Sabrina Wu), an earnest K-pop stan nicknamed for their vacant stare, and Audrey’s college bestie Kat (Stephanie Hsu), a local celebrity in China for her starring role in a costume drama.

Their holiday gets uprooted when Lolo encourages Audrey, who was adopted from China, to find her birth mother. On the surface, Joy Ride is not so distant from this year’s Return To Seoul, the superb drama about an adoptee’s struggle to reconcile her heritage with the person she’s become — except that Lim’s film is bolstered by a heaping sprinkle of threesomes, vomit, and cocaine rammed up arseholes. The Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg-produced film initially coasts along on provocatively uproarious set-pieces — afrantic run-in with a drug dealer, an aggressive sexcapade with a touring basketball team — though not all of it works. An improvised, candy-coloured rendition of ‘WAP’ falls flat before it has even started.

Being an entirely Asian-led comedy, Joy Ride inherently has more baggage than the whiter raunch-fests of past (think The Hangover). There’s a silent mission statement in Cherry Chevapravatdumrong and Teresa Hsiao’s layered screenplay: to defy the tired tropes surrounding Asian women, who are too often portrayed as docile, innocent submissives. That description, rightly, could never fit Audrey, Lolo, Kat and Deadeye. (The latter, while never outright stated, is suggested to be non-binary.) They have sex, take copious substances, and run rampant across China and beyond. There’s something liberating in just simply watching these people be explicitly themselves.

It helps that the cast is so infectiously charming. Park dutifully plays the straight-woman to her more eclectic troupe of besties. And Hsu is just as much a stand-out here as she was in Everything Everywhere All At Once, this time playing a horndog actor feigning celibacy for her Bible-thumping fiancé. She’s heroically game to wholly embody the ways the film tests her character’s frustrated libido.

As with Crazy Rich Asians, which counts Lim as a co-writer, Joy Ride unfurls and expands the nuances of Asian identity. The jokes strike a fine line between specificity and universality; such is the case when Audrey attempts to impress an important client by chugging down a century egg. She bristles at accusations that she’s assimilated so well that she’s “basically white”, but for all the jabs aimed her way for her love of Mumford & Sons and Succession, Audrey’s “whiteness” speaks to the varying shades of the diasporic experience. There’s an uneasy friction, too: the isolation Audrey feels for not speaking the language or appreciating the food — like misunderstanding the inside joke everyone but you laughs at. That, in turn, introduces an inverted dynamic into the group. Audrey, a perennial over-achiever who can easily code-switch at an office squash match with her all-white colleagues, straggles behind her Chinese-speaking friends in her own motherland.

For all of Joy Ride’s coked-up debauchery, that all fades away in a sentimental third act that’s earned, if conventional. Lim’s film faithfully fits the template of Bridesmaids and the like, but it establishes its own identity by filtering insightful commentary through refreshingly crude humour. Clichés be damned: it’s a joy.

VERDICT Both hilarious and heartfelt, Joy Ride packs a nuanced exploration of Asian identity into a Trojan Horse comedy, filled with enough narcotics to get the blood pumping.

Unlock this article and much more with
You can enjoy:
Enjoy this edition in full
Instant access to 600+ titles
Thousands of back issues
No contract or commitment
Try for €1.09
SUBSCRIBE NOW
30 day trial, then just €11,99 / month. Cancel anytime. New subscribers only.


Learn more
Pocketmags Plus
Pocketmags Plus

This article is from...


View Issues
Empire
Sep-23
VIEW IN STORE

Other Articles in this Issue


EMPIRE
Editor NICK DE SEMLYEN
Creative Director CHRIS LUPTON Photography Director JOANNA MORAN
DISPATCHES
TEAM EMPIRE ON A FEW OF OUR HIGH
COMMENT
LETTER OF THE MONTH A FABELMAN FOR ALL
Editorial
WELCOME
Newsstand cover: Ruven Afanador. Background digital imaging: Jacey.
first word
Inside Hollywood’s historic civil war
ALL THE ESSENTIAL INTEL, FROM HOLLYWOOD AND BEYOND
Why the year’s sexiest film is about tennis
ZENDAYA AND HER CHALLENGERS CO-STARS ON BRINGING THREE-LOVE TO THEIR COURT-SET ROMANCE
NEED TO KNOW
GET UP TO SPEED ON JAMES GUNN’S SUPERMAN: LEGACY
From box-office queen to queen of the box
ZOE SALDAÑA TAKES UP ARMS FOR NEW SERIES SPECIAL OPS: LIONESS
A BOGUS JOURNEY INTO THE HEART OF YOUTUBE
ALEX WINTER RETURNS WITH NEW TECH-DOC THE YOUTUBE EFFECT, AS SCARY AS ANYTHING YOU’LL SEE THIS YEAR
FIVE GO WILD WITH NICOLAS WINDING REFN
THE CONTROVERSIAL DANISH DIRECTOR IS ADAPTING ENID BLYTON’S FAMOUS FIVE SERIES. YES, REALLY. WE IMAGINE WHAT MIGHT ENSUE
The Spotlight Archie Madekwe
THE STAR OF GRAN TURISMO AND ARI ASTER’S GO-TO GUY IS MOVING INTO THE FAST LANE
THREE SONGS THAT POWER A DUBLIN MUSICAL
FLORA AND SON DIRECTOR JOHN CARNEY ON THE EVOLUTION OF HIS NEW TUNES
Ken Loach’s last orders
FOR HIS FINAL FILM, THE OLD OAK, THE BRITISH FILMMAKER TAKES HIS POLITICS TO THE PUB
THE BANSHEES BOOZER FINDS A NEW HOME
ON THE SUBJECT OF PUBS, THE WATERING HOLE FROM THE BANSHEES OF INISHERIN IS NOW OPEN TO THE PUBLIC. AND YES, IT’S DONKEY-FRIENDLY
ON OUR MINDS
DAFT MUSINGS FROM THE WARPED MINDS OF TEAM EMPIRE
Rewriting the exorcism playbook
DAVID GORDON GREEN ON UPDATING AN ICONIC HORROR WITH THE EXORCIST: BELIEVER
“ This is going to be one genie that’s hard to cram back into the bottle”
EMPIRE’S CHRIS HEWITT ON RESURRECTING ACTORS FOR THE SCREEN
The R-rated comedy is back to save cinema
AFTER YEARS RELEGATED TO STREAMING, FOUL-MOUTHED FUNNY FILMS ARE MAKING A THEATRICAL RETURN. EMPIRE FINDS OUT WHY
THE PIPELINE
EIGHT MOVIES IN DEVELOPMENT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT
Where the Wickiverse goes next
STRAP ON YOUR BULLETPROOF VEST — JOHN WICK SPIN-OFF THE CONTINENTAL IS COMING IN HOT
THE MONTHLY MIXTAPE
EMPIRE MIXMASTER AMON WARMANN SELECTS THIS MONTH’S ESSENTIAL TUNES
PEDRO ALMODÓVAR HEADS TO THE WILD WEST
THE SPANISH FILMMAKER RIDES INTO NEW TERRAIN WITH HIS STARRY SHORT FILM STRANGE WAY OF LIFE
Trailer Talk Wonka
UNFILTERED, UNCENSORED, UNCOMPROMISING TRAILER REACTIONS FROM TEAM EMPIRE
THE CONTROVERSIAL MOVIE STORMING THE SUMMER
SOUND OF FREEDOM HAS DEFIED ODDS TO BECOME A BOX-OFFICE SENSATION
THE BANS THAT NOBODY SAW COMING
WITH BARBIE LANDING IN HOT WATER, WE EXPLORE WHY CERTAIN MOVIES GOT THE CHOP
How Much Is A Pint Of Milk? Clive Owen
DOES CLIVE KNOW HIS CREAM? THE ACTOR TAKES ON OUR ESOTERIC QUESTIONNAIRE
reviews
BARBIE
LIFE IN PLASTIC: CROWDPLEASINGLY FANTASTIC
ONLY MURDERS IN THE BUILDING SEASON 3
BECAUSE HOMICIDES ALWAYS COME IN THREES
SCRAPPER
★★★★ OUT 25 AUGUST / CERT 12A /
RUBY GILLMAN: TEENAGE KRAKEN
★★★ OUT NOW / CERT PG / 91
THEY CLONED TYRONE
BLAXPLOITATION IS BACK — AND IT’S MULTIPLYING
OPPENHEIMER
OR, HOW CHRISTOPHER NO LAN LEARNED TO STOP WORRYING AND FILM THE BOMB
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: MUTANT MAYHEM
TURTLE POWER REMAINS UNDIMINISHED
KIND OF A BIG DEAL
DON’T ACT LIKE YOU’RE NOT IMPRESSED BY THIS HISTORY OF A COMEDIC MASTERPIECE
ARNOLD
★★★★ EDITOR DIAN HANSON / OUT NOW /
ACROSS THE SPIDER-VERSE: THE ART OF THE MOVIE
★★★★ AUTHOR RAMIN ZAHED / OUT NOW /
SCROUNGING
★★★ EDITOR MARGARET RHODES / OUT NOW /
THE BEAR: SEASON 2
BEAR WITNESS TO ONE OF THE BEST SHOWS CURRENTLY ON TV
THE BLACKENING
THE ‘BLACK GUY DIES FIRST’ TROPE GETS A WELCOME RIPOSTE
THE FIRST SLAM DUNK
FILM ★★★★ OUT 30 AUGUST / CERT TBC
THE INNOCENT
FILM ★★★ OUT 25 AUGUST / CERT 15
MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE -DEAD RECKONING PART ONE
DEAD RECKONING: DEAD GOOD
ALIENS: DARK DESCENT
“NUKE THE SITE FROM ORBIT — IT’S THE ONLY WAY TO BE SURE”
FINAL FANTASY XVI
★★★★ PS5 / OUT NOW Set on the
OXENFREE II: LOST SIGNALS
★★★★ SWITCH, PC, PS4, PS5, ANDROID, IOS /
TRAILS INTO REVERIE
★★★ SWITCH, PS4, PS5, PC / OUT NOW
THEATER CAMP
THIS YEAR’S BIGGEST OFF-OFF-OFF-OFF-BROADWAY HIT
COMMAND Z
THE STEVEN SODERBERGH PROJECT SO SECRET, EVEN DANNY OCEAN COULDN’T HEIST IT
also out
HEAD TO EMPIREONLINE.COM TO READ THESE REVIEWS IN FULL
features
Loose Cannon
RIDLEY SCOTT ’S NAPOLEON TAKES ON HISTORY’S INFAMOUS INVADER. PREPARE FOR PSYCHOLOGICAL WARFARE
ACTION MEN
EVER SINCE TRAINING DAY , DENZEL WASHINGTON AND ANTOINE FUQUA H AV E BE EN MAKING PHYSICAL, NO-NONSE NSE CINE MA. AS THE EQUALIZER 3 CLOSE S A BRUTAL CHAPTER, WE SPEAK TO THEM ABOUT BRINGING THE PAIN
OFF THE DEEP END
How does director Yorgos Lanthimos follow absurdist masterpiece The Favourite? With something even crazier, of course. Get ready, if you can, for POOR THINGS
The Immortal Bruce Lee
He was the most ferocious, most charismatic action star the world had ever known. Now, with the martial- arts master inspiring a whole new wave of actors and filmmakers, some of them pay tribute to the G.O.A.T
SHAPE SHIFTER
HAVING BROKEN THROUGH AS PRINCESS DIANA IN THE CROWN, EMMA CORRIN SWIFTLY ESTABLISHED THEMSELF AS AN ACTOR WILLING TO TAKE ON ALL CHALLENGES, NEVER DOING THE SAME THING TWICE. WE SPEAK TO THEM ABOUT CHANGING THINGS UP AND GOING THE DISTANCE
HOOKED on a FEELING
CELINE SONG’S PAST LIVES, ABOUT A WOMAN RECONNECTING WITH HER CHILDHOOD SWEETHEART, HAS BEEN ELICITING TEARS AT FILM FESTIVALS. MAKING IT PROVED JUST AS EMOTIONAL
ROME BURNS
CALIGULA
final cut
The dungeon masters
A FRESH LOOK AT HOME ENTERTAINMENT
The Killer
JOHN WOO’S ICONIC BALLET OF BLOOD
PICKS OF THE MONTH
1___ PRETTY RED DRESS (7 AUG, BR) Dionne
Time Capsule Terry Gilliam
THE ANARCHIC DIRECTOR ON HIS LIFE IN PICTURES
The Ballad Of Rocket Raccoon
AS GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY VOL. 3 BRINGS JAMES GUNN’ S MCU RUN TO AN END, HE REFLECTS ON HIS FAVOURITE CHARACTER
TALES FROM KIM'S CRYPT
THIS MONTH SHARKS I SAW JAWS on a
CRYPT KEEPERS
KIM’S PICK OF THE WEIRD AND WONDERFUL
When Harry Met Sally
HOW ICONIC IMAGES CAME TO LIFE
PETER JACKSON
WHY HE GETS A MENTION IN THE END CREDITS OF THE KING’S MAN (2021)
The Ranking
Pink Panther movies
THE TOP TEN
1 A SHOT IN THE DARK (1964)
Evil Dead Rise
DIRECTOR LEE CRONIN O NTHE SURPRISES OF HIS DEADITE-DRENCHED SEQUEL
The Ultimate Empire Quiz
THIS MONTH
WIN!
CAMPFIRE AUDIO EARBUDS
THE ENDING Five Easy Pieces
DANO: “There’s a scene from Five Easy Pieces
Chat
X
Pocketmags Support