Purple" smartly resists the impulse to make this story swerve into a romance between Kasie and Octavio. The potential is there, but Kasie is too frantically But "Ms. Purple" works because of Chu's performance.
Purple is a finely tuned meditation on the struggles of a young generation bravely attempting to provide for their elders while trying to stay afloat in a cutthroat SoCal society that has The percentage of Approved Tomatometer Critics who have given this movie a positive review. Purple movie reviews & Metacritic score: Ms. Purple is a poignant drama about Asian American sister and brother, Kasie (Tiffany Chu) and Carey (Teddy Lee.
Your score has been saved for Ms. Would you like to write a review? Tiffany Chu plays a conflicted young woman in Justin Chon's "Ms. Christy Lemire (RogerEbert.com, @christylemire) and Matt Atchity (Moviefone.com, @matchity) review Ms. Purple, co-written and directed by Justin Chon and. Not all of the lights are so pretty, even on the siblings' happiest moments Sometimes, the movie loses some momentum over the course of too many brooding "Ms.
Trailer Ms. Purple
Purple" is a gorgeous film about one of the worst moments of many people's lives, but isn't the. She wears a purple hanbok this time, it's tattered purple ribbons fluttering in the wind. It's a poignant if unsubtle visual foreshadowing of the story ahead, of a woman burdened by obligation and silent in her misery.
Kasie, played by the excellent Tiffany Chu, works as a doumi, an escort who gets paid to keep. Semi-estranged siblings reunite over their father's deathbed in 'Gook' director Justin Chon's stylish character drama. Reviewed at Sundance Film Festival (competing), Jan. "Ms. Purple" stumbles a bit with exposition, including an off-handed reveal that Kasie wanted to be a musician but quit school to care for her father.