The Joy Luck Club | Rotten Tomatoes (2024)

86% Tomatometer 85 Reviews 89% Audience Score 25,000+ Ratings

In San Francisco, a group of aging Chinese women (Kiều Chinh, Tsai Chin, France Nuyen, Lisa Lu) meet regularly to trade familial stories while playing Mahjong. In a series of sixteen vignettes that spans generations and continents, this adaptation of Amy Tan's bestselling novel explores cultural conflict and the often-turbulent relationships between four first-generation Chinese-American women (Ming-Na Wen, Tamlyn Tomita, Lauren Tom, Rosalind Chao) and their mothers. Read More Read Less

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The Joy Luck Club

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The Joy Luck Club

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Critics Consensus

The Joy Luck Club traces the generational divide, unearthing universal truths while exploring lives through the lens of a specific cultural experience.

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Critics Reviews

View All (85) Critics Reviews
The Joy Luck Club | Rotten Tomatoes (1) Mary F. Chen Seattle Times Both generations are fearful of revealing their true identities, yet hopeful of discovery. This is the greatest truth of The Joy Luck Club, both the film and the novel. Dec 17, 2020 Full Review The Joy Luck Club | Rotten Tomatoes (2) Derek Malcolm Guardian The film persists in telling us what to think and feel, rather than letting us have our own quiet thoughts. Dec 17, 2020 Full Review The Joy Luck Club | Rotten Tomatoes (3) Carrie Rickey Philadelphia Inquirer This heartrending and transcendent adaptation of Amy Tan's bestseller about a quartet of Chinese American daughters and their immigrant mothers is the ultimate movie about almost everyone's first love: Mom. Rated: 4/4 Dec 17, 2020 Full Review The Joy Luck Club | Rotten Tomatoes (4) Rene Jordan El Nuevo Herald (Miami) Wang goes from homey intimacy to the political whirlwinds of China seamlessly, a one piece texture, without showing its seams. [Full review in Spanish] Jun 7, 2022 Full Review The Joy Luck Club | Rotten Tomatoes (5) Molly Haskell Ladies' Home Journal No one will want to miss this celebration of the mother- daughter bond, that most vexed and fascinating of relationships -- and one of the most neglected themes in American film. Aug 4, 2021 Full Review The Joy Luck Club | Rotten Tomatoes (6) Marshall Fine Gannett News Service The ensemble cast is perfect... All of the women playing the daughters Rosalind Chao, Lauren Tom, Tamlyn Tomita and Ming-Na Wen are equally strong, though Wen and Tomita are particularly affecting. Rated: 4/4 Dec 17, 2020 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (1000+) audience reviews

Ivana J The most heartfelt movie of all time. The acting is amazing, you can feel the emotion of every character. The complexities of their relationships and how it transcends generations is so raw. This movie has stayed with me over the decades, I’ll always come back to it, it’s one of my top most favorite movies. Rated 5/5 Stars • Rated 5 out of 5 stars 06/15/24 Full Review Jerod S The original story is so well written and solid - and the movie sticks to it. Cultural and generational issues between moms and daughters from China. Rated 4/5 Stars • Rated 4 out of 5 stars 04/16/24 Full Review Kyle M Common tropes across different pictures that are motivated politically, socially and culturally generate a societal consensus, which then are genetically amplified upon generational diversions but remain arguably similar despite improved livelihood. This continues the unfolding coverage of generational heft apparently traumatized in one form or another being withheld within, whether out of stubbornness or protection which only fuels the spawned angsty being disrespectfully unaware. There couldn't possibly be an absolute solution if the healing process is that simple that could erase the shared and experienced circ*mstances only wisely guided towards the marital exit. Based on Amy Tan's book, "The Joy Luck Club" coasts on those continuous beliefs with layered complexity that enriches in thematic value.The club consists of four aging Chinese women who meets regularly playing mahjong and share their stories, either about their struggling pasts and/or proudness over their daughters that were born American. However, one of their own recently passed, so that daughter received news from her fellow aunties about a resolving antidote to her late-mother's haunted conscience regarding older twin sisters that were thought lost. In a kickoff party, the hidden pasts are reflected in how the family bonds were tested through the culturally clashing struggles between the first-generation Chinese-American women and their mothers whose lives were hypocritically conformed from one homeland to another.Poetically driven, framed by the opening poem speaking about a swan flying over new horizons but separately not a whole as the last feather can only be gifted to the offspring in hope for better beginning. The talk of identity that the characters grapples with becomes clearer when re-listening to that poem after digesting all the thematic components they face by generational division as it consistently shapes their lives onto the next with a hint of increased brightness once the mothers unpack their baggage and their daughters finds the right guidance from them. Therefore resolving the given challenges with newfound understanding and inspired charges over their mental wellbeing. That's not only the case for them but also the same gone for the mothers when they were coming of age facing conservative cases that were pre-established as traditions by differential culture (how that particular culture doesn't feel shame with mismatched trouble is beyond comprehension). Culturally aligned finds expectancy and obedience underling sexism, then other themes coloring their struggles are generic from vocal silence to manipulation, financial and abusive, while facing possible discrimination over given statuses. We find the mothers overcome what they experienced despite personally withheld over the years as they recollect themselves, only to re-ignite that conservative fire and re-taught their lessons onto their daughters' exploring individualism, who also been confronted by genetically repeating history when experiencing the societal conformations their mothers. That's possibly a reflection over pressured lifestyle as immigrants wanting to live their lives under different conformations but less restrictive, but the inner motives have been deemed more personal and linked towards their bonds. One instance as such finds one of the daughters possessing all the confirmed weight onto her marriage till confronted by realization she has a voice, and her husband supports her voice based on acknowledged perception.Despite not having the time to check the book out, the film adaptation enrichingly boasts the thematically hefty materials with generational patterns across its transitionally impressive narrative. The stories may be thematically familiar by margin, it's the complex compilation linking across adjacent associations since normally they would be emphasized singularly. It captivates these stories, albeit to certain sorrowful degrees, as the narrative seamlessly transitions from the mother's history to that of the daughter's with occasional shares partially reacting to notable symbolism. Author Amy Tan penned the page-to-screen treatment, with the help of Ronald Bass to define an accessible platform in reasonably delivering these stories, hence the farewell party and its narrative hook that reflectively weave across the grasped perspectives' notions for nonlinear engagement. That also acts as an opportunity for additional materials when we formally identify the characters we're given a solid glimpse of their current nuances. Just going chronological as once thought would've dampened both identification and the story's impacts, especially when only revisiting flashbacks like one of the club's typical sessions. Framed by the poem through haunts and dissatisfactions to blossomed cherishment, the final scene caps the beautiful, meaningful buildup towards a hopeful message as a summed statement."The Joy Luck Club" intrigued when "Crazy Rich Asians" came out 25 years later, remarking a rare Hollywood gimmick featuring an all-Asian cast. Kieu Chinh and Ming-Na Wen portrays Suyuan and June Woo, Tsai Chin and Tamlyn Tomita as Lindo and Waverly Jong, France Nuyen and Lauren Tom as Ying-Ying and Lena St. Clair, then finally Lisa Lu and Rosalind Chao as An-Mei and Rose Hsu, all the mothers and daughters respectively. They all performed splendidly with pleasant charm as their performative executions of the assigned themes are at times strong when pushed to their discomforting edge, and graceful commitment laced as expressive gravitas that touches the wisdom and the pursued truth, while then also worked well off of each other through their cherished chemistries. Between the excellent cast and the thematic complexity being structurally relishing, "The Joy Luck Club" gets discovered as a relaxing gathering between friends with analytical layers, signifying a promising, solid good time in which you could learn a thing or two – or more depends on the relatable case. (B+) Rated 4/5 Stars • Rated 4 out of 5 stars 09/19/23 Full Review Rajesh B This film's narrative flow is much like a play. Told in chapters and performed wonderfully. It confirms the stereotype of Chinese culture and lifestyle but justifies it with a need to through the hardships of history. A definite watch. Rated 4.5/5 Stars • Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars 09/03/22 Full Review Audience Member Still one of my absolute favorites... Rated 5/5 Stars • Rated 5 out of 5 stars 05/07/22 Full Review Audience Member “No matter what I do, I cannot be more than what I am. And that hurts.” Rated 5/5 Stars • Rated 5 out of 5 stars 03/02/22 Full Review Read all reviews

The Joy Luck Club

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Cast & Crew

Wayne Wang Director Rosalind Chao Rose Hsu Jordan Tamlyn Tomita Waverly Jong France Nuyen Ying-Ying St. Clair Vivian Wu An Mei's Mother Andrew McCarthy Ted Jordan
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Movie Info

Synopsis In San Francisco, a group of aging Chinese women (Kiều Chinh, Tsai Chin, France Nuyen, Lisa Lu) meet regularly to trade familial stories while playing Mahjong. In a series of sixteen vignettes that spans generations and continents, this adaptation of Amy Tan's bestselling novel explores cultural conflict and the often-turbulent relationships between four first-generation Chinese-American women (Ming-Na Wen, Tamlyn Tomita, Lauren Tom, Rosalind Chao) and their mothers.

Director
Wayne Wang

Producer
Ronald Bass, Patrick Markey, Amy Tan

Screenwriter
Amy Tan, Ronald Bass

Distributor
Buena Vista Pictures

Production Co
Hollywood Pictures

Rating
R

Genre
Drama

Original Language
English

Release Date (Theaters)
Sep 8, 1993, Wide

Release Date (Streaming)
Jan 1, 2014

Box Office (Gross USA)
$32.8M

Runtime
2h 18m

Sound Mix
Surround, Stereo
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The Joy Luck Club | Rotten Tomatoes (2024)
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