No No Girl (2022) Poster

(2022)

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10/10
Yes Yes Yes to No No Girl
tgustin-934394 July 2023
Goodman masterfully captures the ripple effects of one of America's darkest atrocities through a riveting story about family, loss, and healing. Spanning three generations of an American-Japanese family, the film alternates between present day and past following what starts as one girl's curiosity about her grandmother's life and what turns into a quest to uncover secrets almost a century-old that stand to threaten the very fabric of a family born out of an era of discrimination, interment, and shame. A film as worthy as the story it brings to life. Sensational cast and chemistry. A must see..
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10/10
Beautiful family drama confidently directed
lighthousekeeeper8 May 2023
"The No No Girl" is a beautifully directed movie that explores the complexities of family relationships and the impact of buried secrets on family identity and stability. The film is centered around a fourth-gen Nisei Hasegawa family, and the story begins with the discovery of love letters written by the just-deceased grandmother. The family decides to bury a "treasure chest" of family heirlooms to spare them from confiscation or destruction. The protagonist Sue Hasegawa, a millennial woman, launches a search into her family history and uncovers long-buried family secrets that threaten to topple her family's stability and identity.

What makes "The No No Girl" so special is the way it portrays a Japanese American family, which is different from other Asian American families. The Hasegawas are third and fourth-generation Japanese Americans living in Southern California, and their family history is deeply connected to the generational aftereffects of Executive Order 9066, which sent many Japanese Americans to concentration camps during World War II. The film explores how this history affects the family's sense of identity and belonging, and how it impacts their relationships with each other.

The film's director, Paul Daisuke Goodman, weaves together many characters and elements with great skill, balancing heavy themes such as property theft with moments of light-hearted comedy. The performances of the actors are outstanding, and the characters are well-developed and believable. The film also beautifully captures the complexity of family relationships, showing how secrets and buried emotions can have far-reaching consequences.

In conclusion, "The No No Girl" is a must-watch film that beautifully explores the complexities of family relationships and the impact of buried secrets on family identity and stability. The film's portrayal of a Japanese American family is unique and adds an important perspective to the portrayal of Asian American families in popular culture. The film is expertly directed, and the performances are outstanding. I highly recommend this film to anyone who enjoys thought-provoking cinema.
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10/10
Who I am and who we are
billcabrol21 May 2024
To me, individuals and families identify themselves in contexts. Some contexts are: who the other family members are, how spirituality connects them, their rituals, their shared celebrations, their shared tragedies, their shared grievances, their secrets, and especially in America, their heritages. This film depicts a family who struggles with the underlying half-known history of their family. Japanese American families with histories that go back to at least WWII have a special context: family members who were forced from their homes and into concentration camps thanks to Executive Order 9066. This was a shameful period of America that forced Americans from their homes because they looked like people of the nation that attacked Pearl Harbor on December seventh, nineteen forty-one. To me, one big issue of the film emerges: "Who are we? We are Americans whose parents and grandparents were 'othered' and their homes ripped from their possession through no fault of their own." The contemporary family goes through typical life in having family events, having jobs, going to college, and being connected to the overall culture with music, literature, movies, and news items. But, they are dealing with an extra dimension of dynamics. The family has been held together by the children of those who experienced the camps. Now, some evidence of the lives of the grandparents comes to light and a conflict emerges: do they keep the family together by not looking more deeply into some found letters and items of that time, or do they dig into this evidence and have the family structure threatened by exposing these unknown secrets? What would they find? Would the findings change their identities? Would something come to light that could cause them embarrassment? I saw the main tension coming from some of the family wanting to know what these details are no matter what it says about the family versus keeping the status quo of the family identity by not delving into these secrets and details. During wartime incarceration, these families were asked if they were willing to serve on combat duty wherever ordered or perhaps serve in the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps. They were also asked if they would swear unqualified allegiance to the United States and forswear any form of allegiance to the Emperor of Japan. 'No No Girl' gets its title from answering "no" to these questions. As an American, I say "How dare you ask me these questions!" These Americans were not treated as citizens who could have a freedom of choice to join the war effort or not. These Americans were asked a question of allegiance to someone they never had any connection to. The play 'Allegiance' delves into these issues by showing families experiencing the camps. This film shows the contemporary aftermath of this with its implications on the family. One of the implications is that the family knows exactly where the home their grandparents had, and it is nearby. Their home was stolen from them and their family was still able to reform themselves and start again. I could feel the pain behind the eyes of the family members who were going through these many levels of conflict. My family came from countries other than America. We were not treated like this. But I sure as hell can imagine what that might have felt like. I can imagine that because I am a human being, worthy of respect and dignity, just like them.
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