27
Metascore
6 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 70TV Guide MagazineKen FoxTV Guide MagazineKen FoxMeng's film, which uses a fairly sophisticated flashback structure to reveal the secrets of Ah Na's past in China, touches on a number of very serious subjects: the business of illegal immigration, the exploitation of "aliens" and the treatment of people with AIDS in China. But it's also filled with touches of humor.
- 38New York Daily NewsJack MathewsNew York Daily NewsJack MathewsEarnestness is the primary appeal of Meng Ong's clumsy melodrama.
- 30VarietyDavid RooneyVarietyDavid RooneyCluttered, unfocused script attempts too much.
- 25New York PostLou LumenickNew York PostLou LumenickA baffling mixed platter of gritty realism and magic realism with a hard-to-swallow premise.
- 20The New York TimesDana StevensThe New York TimesDana StevensThe director has fallen into the common first-timer's trap of biting off more than he can chew, stitching together an unwieldy, disorganized story out of subplots and flashbacks, without paying enough attention to the basic requirements of character and narrative.
- 20Village VoiceEd ParkVillage VoiceEd ParkAs genre comeuppance, this might have been nasty fun, but the movie barely makes sense, with its unbelievable naïveté and arbitrary flashbacks.