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Tom Hanks and more stars share their favorite Christmas movies

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Tom Hanks and more stars share their favorite Christmas movies

For those who’re seeking to crank up the nostalgia and vacation magic, there’s an countless listing of Christmas classics like “It is a Fantastic Life,” “Miracle of thirty fourth Avenue” and “Nationwide Lampoon’s Christmas Trip.”

Plus, the more moderen movies which have earned a spot on everybody’s annual must-watch listing like “Elf,” “The Polar Specific” and “Klaus,” the final a private favourite (strongly really helpful).

The most well-liked style for Christmas film is comedy, based on IMDb. Topping the listing for the class is the ’90s hit “Dwelling Alone” with a 7.7 score out of 10.

“Irrespective of once they happen — trendy period or interval — Christmas films and tv specials are all the time about somebody who has misplaced their religion in humankind, regaining it. Saved by different individuals being form,” Tom Hanks, who stars in “The Polar Specific” and “You’ve got Obtained Mail” (sure, some put this romcom on the Christmas listing), informed CNN.

We polled Hanks and some different celebrities, together with a number of CNN journalists, about their favourite Christmas films. This is how a few of their picks measured up towards well-liked opinion.

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Tom Hanks: ‘A Charlie Brown Christmas’

  • Style: Animation
  • Gross: Not listed
  • Launch date: December 9, 1965
  • IMDb score: 8.3
  • Enjoyable reality: The TV particular was put collectively in only a matter of weeks to satisfy broadcast calls for. A number of the individuals concerned in its manufacturing thought it was going to bomb, nevertheless it was a direct hit.

“It most likely lasts about 24 minutes, however time freezes after I watch Snoopy construct his doghouse with all of the ornaments on it, the lights, and he wins first prize. It is nice watching these youngsters rehearse their Christmas play. It simply hits that Christmas is drawing close to while you see Snoopy and Charlie Brown,” Hanks informed CNN.

Ron Howard: ‘It is a Fantastic Life’

  • Style: Drama
  • Gross: Not listed
  • Launch date: December 20, 1946
  • IMDb score: 8.6
  • Enjoyable reality: This Jimmy Stewart traditional has the best score of any Christmas film on IMBd.

“I do not know what number of instances I’ve seen ‘It is a Fantastic Life.’ I discover it is one of the vital fascinating tales to revisit and I by no means ever watched it with out taking a second to think about that central thematic query: Are you conscious of the best way you may have an effect on these round you and the ripple impact of it?

Who would not cry while you see Jimmy Stewart rediscover himself and his need to stay? In a very sophisticated, troublesome, irritating world, a damnable world, there, the selection to have interaction and stay issues and you may matter. And it was highly effective then and it is highly effective now. In actual fact, it is extra highly effective now,” Howard mentioned.

Bobby Flay: ‘Elf’

  • Style: Comedy
  • Gross: $255 million (adjusted)
  • Launch date: October 9, 2003
  • IMDb score: 7
  • Enjoyable reality: This film’s tagline was: “This vacation, uncover your inside elf”.

“My favourite vacation film is ‘Elf.’ I feel Will Ferrell is a comedic genius. My favourite scene within the film is when he thinks he finds the best cup of espresso on the planet,” Flay informed CNN.

CNN’s Abby Phillip: ‘The Preacher’s Spouse’

  • Style: Household
  • Gross: $92 million (adjusted)
  • Launch date: December 13, 1996
  • IMDb score: 5.6
  • Enjoyable reality: This movie is not formally tagged as a “Christmas” film by IMDb, however it’s by The Film Database.

“My favourite Christmas film is ‘The Preacher’s Spouse.’ It’s the greatest Christmas film. You bought Whitney Houston, you bought Denzel Washington, and you’ve got a story of an angel nearly having an affair with the preacher’s spouse. I imply it would not get higher than that.

I watch it yearly, a number of instances, through the Christmas season, however I like watching it on Christmas day and I like enjoying the soundtrack. The soundtrack for that film is superb. It’s such a enjoyable Christmas film and it is a bit spicy as Christmas films go,” Phillips mentioned.

Dr. Sanjay Gupta: ‘Dwelling Alone’

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  • Style: Comedy
  • Gross: $592 million (adjusted)
  • Launch date: November 16, 1990
  • IMBd score: 7.7
  • Enjoyable reality: Dwelling Alone is the most well-liked “Christmas” film on IMDb, based on the location’s inner rating that considers consumer searches and different metrics.

“The one which all the time makes me instantly consider Christmas is ‘Dwelling Alone.’ It instantly takes me to Christmas. That is the one which my three teenage ladies and I’ll curl up on the sofa and look ahead to certain,” Gupta mentioned.

Dana Bash: ‘Love Truly’ (and ‘It is a Fantastic Life’)

  • Style: Comedy
  • Gross: $87 million
  • Launch date: September 7, 2003
  • IMBd score: 7.6
  • Enjoyable reality: For the twentieth anniversary of the movie, Hugh Grant, Laura Linney, Emma Thompson, Invoice Nighy and Thomas Brodie-Sangster are participating within the particular reunion.

“I can not even take into consideration Christmas Eve with out fascinated with ‘It is a Fantastic Life’ and Jimmy Stewart as a result of it is my childhood. It is what our household would do. We’d curl up on the sofa — or after I was little I’d get into the large chair with my dad — and we might watch the film as a result of it was my dad’s favourite film.

Extra lately, my favourite Christmas film is ‘Love Truly.’ It simply makes me so joyful the best way it ends. It is such a constructive message. It is so humorous. It is such a traditional. If “Love Truly” is on TV and I occur to click on on it, I am finished, I’ve to complete it. It is simply the most effective Christmas film,” Bash mentioned.

Jake Tapper: ‘Die Arduous’

  • Style: Motion
  • Gross: $161 million (adjusted)
  • Launch date: 1988
  • IMDb score: 8.2
  • Enjoyable reality: Die Arduous is the highest-rated motion film on IMDb’s “Christmas listing”.

“My favourite Christmas film is with out query ‘Die Arduous.’ I do know it is controversial to say, however ‘Die Arduous’ is clearly a Christmas film. It takes place on Christmas and there are numerous themes all through the film about Christmas. His spouse’s identify is Holly for God’s sake.

It has all the weather you need in a Christmas film: Homecoming, love and quite a lot of killing of terrorists,” Tapper mentioned.

Dr. Anthony Fauci: ‘Miracle on thirty fourth Avenue’

  • Style: Comedy
  • Gross: Not listed
  • Launch date: June 4, 1947
  • IMBd score: 7.9
  • Enjoyable reality: This traditional was remade in 1994 by director Les Mayfield. The comply with up has a 6.6 score on IMDb.

“My favourite Christmas film is ‘Miracle on thirty fourth Avenue.’ It brings me again to my childhood as a result of it was made after I was a toddler and you’ll see it each Christmas. It simply had that harmless heat of Christmas about it, the innocence of childhood,” Fauci informed CNN.

Sara Sidner: ‘A Christmas Story’

  • Style: Comedy
  • Gross: $60 million (adjusted)
  • Launch date: November 18, 1983
  • IMBd score: 7.9
  • Enjoyable reality: Peter Billingsley returns as a now-adult “Ralphie” in a sequel set for launch this yr.

“I watch it yearly a minimum of twice. I used to have it go 24 hours a day. ‘You will shoot your eye out, child,’ is like part of my life. It is just like the script of my life. I used to be a really energetic little one and will simply kind of see myself within the situation with the bullies and the entire thing.

The narrator for that movie is just like the voice of God to me. It brings out each childhood surprise and harm imaginable. I beloved it a lot that I went to Cleveland at one level and went to see the house the place it was filmed,” Sidner mentioned.

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Kate Bolduan: ‘Scrooged’

  • Style: Comedy
  • Gross: $154 million (adjusted)
  • Launch date: November 22, 1988
  • IMBd score: 6.9
  • Enjoyable reality: IMDb tags this Invoice Murray-led ghost story as a comedy, however The Film Database says it is a fantasy movie.

“There is just one and it can’t be debated. It’s arms down the most effective vacation film of all time, which is “Scrooged.” Invoice Murray as Frank Cross: Delightfully horrendous, cyclical, horrible human being. After which within the traditional Christmas carol vogue, turns it throughout. Not misplaced on me is that Frank Cross is a TV government. So, there’s hope for all of us,: Bolduan mentioned.

Ana Cabrera: ‘Rudolph the Purple-Nosed Reindeer’

  • Style: Animation
  • Launch date: December 6, 1946
  • IMDb score: 8
  • Enjoyable reality: This beloved animated movie — launched as a tv particular — is among the many shortest on IMDb’s “Christmas” listing, with a runtime of simply 47 minutes.

“Who would not love Rudolph? I simply bear in mind rising up that was the one film we had to verify we watched. It is one which simply sticks with you. It is such a feel-good film: the characters, the message, the magic. At the same time as an grownup, it is the one I would like my youngsters to observe yearly as a result of I nonetheless like it as a lot as I did then,” Cabrera mentioned.

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Opera gets slapped with the 'elitist' label. L.A. proves just how wrong that is

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Opera gets slapped with the 'elitist' label. L.A. proves just how wrong that is

The label of elitism sticks to opera like superglue. The label is a fake, but one for which no cultural chemical capable of removing it has yet proved effective. Still, opera populists are trying and appear to be making progress.

Los Angeles Opera last week unveiled two new productions of operas old or avant-garde: Verdi’s 19th century chestnut “La Traviata,” and Huang Ruo’s 2021 “Book of Mountains and Seas,” based on ancient Chinese myths. Both are literally worlds apart, they were given in theaters large (the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion downtown) and small (the Broad Stage in Santa Monica), and they were designed for different audiences. The performances I saw were well attended and enthusiastically received.

Both raised the question of what makes opera elite, as opposed to, say, a Lakers game. Wealth or privilege, say the lexographers at Oxford, a university where wealth and privilege have sway. As I write, tickets purchased on the L.A. Opera website for the Wednesday performance of “La Traviata” range from $89 to $329. The next night, the Lakers take on the Denver Nuggets at Crypto.com Arena. Cash in your crypto (if you still can) for nuggets of gold: Tickets on the Lakers website begin at $249, rising to five grand. Event parking at the Music Center is $10, a quarter of the price Crypto.com charges for a Lakers game.

Opera has been popular entertainment through much of its early history. Castrati were the pop stars of the Baroque era. At the time Verdi wrote “La Traviata,” he was so popular that his latest tunes were as closely guarded before a premiere as a Beyoncé track.

There were peanut galleries in all the great 19th century European opera houses, and there have been cheap seats ever since. As a student, I often attended San Francisco Opera several times a week, standing room being no more than the price of a movie. Tickets for L.A. Opera mainstage productions start around $35 or less, and they go fast.

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The intimidation factor is often the main reason credited with keeping new audiences away from opera. What to wear? There is no dress code. Some people dress up, and hard-core fans can be found in jeans.

What to know? When I listen to a rap recording, I sometimes employ a guide to follow allusions in the lyrics that may escape me. If “La Traviata” is a mystery to you, arrive an hour early and the company’s music director, James Conlon, will explain it to you in his engaging pre-performance talk. A plot synopsis is in the program and English translations of the libretto are projected on screens during the performance.

That said, there is always the danger of a welcome turning into glad-handing. In the recent past, L.A. had been in the process of becoming a leader in taking bold theatrical chances, making our opera some of the most relevant theater anywhere and L.A. the hippest opera city in America. But we have entered a culturally risk-adverse period. Our present age of anxiety — which includes post-pandemic economic challenges to the arts, diminished attention spans and audiences seeking escape from all but virtual reality — has ushered in an atmosphere of caution in just about everything presented to the public.

A successful L.A. Opera strategy for building new audiences has, therefore, been precisely the opposite of challenge. Real old-fashioned opera, the more retro the better, has become the new cool.

Liparit Avetisyan as Alfredo, far right, Rachel Willis-Sorensen as Violetta (seated in blue) and the cast of L.A. Opera’s “La Traviata.”

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(Cory Weaver / LA Opera)

The “Traviata” production the company imported from San Francisco Opera fits right in with period sets and costumes so formulaic as to feel ironically surreal, along with park-and-bark direction for the singers. There is a hint of wink-wink-nod-nod kink in a party scene (this is from San Francisco, after all), comic not erotic.

The performance sounds far better than it looks thanks in large part to Conlon’s commanding conducting that makes everything seem to matter despite appearances. The standout in the cast is the Violetta of Rachel Willis-Sorensen, her silvery and supple soprano making for a more brilliant than affectingly consumptive character. The starchy tenor, Liparit Avetisyan, as Violetta’s lover Alfredo, seems to like singing to the audience more than to her.

Ironically, the appeal may be that this is just outdated enough and nonthreatening enough to feel newly fashionable. The silly kink brings a smile. Any intimations of feminism dare seem threatening. By escaping modern theater, by not allowing “La Traviata” to be upsetting, we are offered a three-hour escape from reality.

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In its attempts at opera for all, the Los Angeles company also has found ways to take opera out of the opera house. On May 3 and 4, Conlon brings back his warm, magnificent, family-friendly and free L.A. Opera production of Benjamin Britten’s “Noah’s Flood” at Our Lady of the Angels downtown. Expect to leave the cathedral feeling better than when you entered.

Experimental opera was also sent off Grand avenue. At the Broad Stage, “Book of Mountains and Seas” — part of L.A. Opera’s annual collaboration with Beth Morrison Projects, makers of new opera — was everything that “Traviata” was not. The imaginative production by puppeteer Basil Twist proved stunning. The cast contained a dozen equally ideal singers. What vague narrative there is comes across as barely explicable. Words and music didn’t matter all that much. The escape from reality, in this case, was of the go-with-the-flow variety.

A scene from 'The Book of Mountains and Seas'

A scene from “The Book of Mountains and Seas,” produced by Beth Morrison Projects.

(Steven Pisano)

Huang Ruo’s impetus is “The Classic of Mountains and Seas” from ancient China, which describes the mythic plants and creatures with odd powers. The four tales selected from “The Classic” for the opera — the birth of the hairy giant Pangu, a spirit bird who attacks water, the folly of 10 suns, and a giant who thinks he can capture the sun — are dramatized through the fuzzy ritual of a puppet being assembled.

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The singers, the Ars Nova Copenhagen, are the real stars. Indeed for the West Coast appearances of “Mountains and Seas,” which is currently touring, this amazing Danish chamber choir might well have set the scene for the 75-minute opera with Lou Harrison’s “Mass for Saint Cecilia’s Day.” The group’s meditative yet exhilarating recording of this Californian mix Harrison’s gothic chant and ancient Asian tunings is a model for what Huang Ruo was after. Still the sounds were entrancing and the giant puppet impressive.

Atmosphere may not an opera make, but as escapes from reality go, there are far fewer appealing ones than this. And with luck L.A. Opera’s efforts at taking the elitism out of opera may make a difference. In the next two months, the town will be the site of an informal opera-for-all festival.

The Los Angeles Philharmonic is remounting “Fidelio” with Deaf West Theatre next month, Opera America and World Opera Forum host conferences in L.A. in June, and new work is coming from Long Beach Opera and the Industry — along with dozens of offerings from L.A. Opera, the happily populist Pacific Opera Project, Beth Morrison and others. Anyone with a stage, a costume, a voice and an idea is welcome. That is the L.A. opera ideal.

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Sean Means Movie Reviews for April 19th, 2024 – X96

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Sean Means Movie Reviews for April 19th, 2024 – X96



Opening April 19, 2024

Artsies:

• “The Beast” • Time-hopping French/English romance • Broadway • 3 1/2 stars

A movie set 20 years in the future where human emotion is seen as dangerous and AI controls everything.

Director: Bertrand Bonello

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Stars: Lea Seydoux, George MacKay, Guslagie Malanda

 

What I saw:

• “Rebel Moon: Part Two – The Scargiver” • Zach Snyder not-“Star Wars” • Netflix • 1 1/2 stars

Warrior Kora and other warriors have to fight to live in their new home Veldt against the Realm.

Director: Zack Snyder

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Stars: Sofia Boutella, Charlie Hunnam, Anthony Hopkins

 

• “The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare” • WWII spy action movie • theaters • 2 1/2 stars

In World War II, a group of trained and accomplished soldiers are hired by the British government to take down forces of Germany from behind the enemy lines.

Director: Guy Ritchie

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Stars: Henry Cavill, Alan Ritchson, Alex Pettyfer

 

 • “Abigail” • tiny vampire vs. criminals • theaters • 3 stars

The daughter of a powerful figure is kidnapped by a group of criminals and brought to a vacant mansion. Little do they know that she isn’t like any little girl they’ve seen before.

Director: Matt Bettinelli Olpin, Tyler Gillett

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Stars: Melissa Barrera, Dan Stevens, Alisha Weir

 

———

Next week:

 • Challengers

 • Unsung Hero

 • Boy Kills World




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'The Sympathizer' depicts war from a Vietnamese point of view, but how does the community see it?

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'The Sympathizer' depicts war from a Vietnamese point of view, but how does the community see it?

Never before has a television series garnered so much excitement, attention and concern among California’s expatriate Vietnamese community, the world’s largest, as “The Sympathizer.”

HBO’s seven-part espionage thriller depicting the Vietnam War and its aftermath — or the American War, as seen on the title card that opens the series — premiered Sunday and new episodes will air weekly through May 26. It was co-created by South Korean director Park Chan-wook and Don McKellar, and features Oscar-winning actor Robert Downey Jr. in several roles (he is also an executive producer). “The Sympathizer” is based on Viet Thanh Nguyen’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of the same name, which follows a French Vietnamese communist spy.

The series is groundbreaking for casting actors who are Vietnamese or of Vietnamese descent in lead roles and much of the dialogue is spoken in Vietnamese, though it was made for American audiences. And the opening episode takes place in Vietnam, depicting the fall of Saigon and a harrowing escape on an airstrip.

For a younger generation, the series is an opportunity to showcase Vietnamese stories globally, but for an older generation, “The Sympathizer” has stirred some discontent, especially among those who fought in the war. They point to the show’s lead character, the Captain — a communist spy who infiltrates the South Vietnamese army and follows the General, his boss, to Los Angeles, where they resettle — saying it glorifies the communists, the enemy — by presenting the spy’s disparaging viewpoints about the South.

Such sentiments were among those shared at a viewing party organized by Alan Vo Ford, held at Pink Moon, a Chinese restaurant in Beverly Hills, where the premiere episode was streamed for 30 friends from the Los Angeles and Orange County area on Sunday. Ford, 49, a Westminster resident, real estate broker and film producer of Vietnamese movies such as “A Fragile Flower” and “Journey From the Fall,” said he felt compelled to organize the event because it’s so rare for a major Hollywood series about Vietnamese people to be made.

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“I felt it was my duty as a Vietnamese American to spread the word so the world would know about Vietnam and American history during this historic period of time,” he said. Ford said when he was a baby, his mother held him while “running and dodging bombs during the final days,” just like in the last scenes of the first episode. His father was in a reeducation camp for 9 years, and his family arrived in the U.S. in 1985.

“This is a breakthrough series for the Vietnamese community to be on HBO and work with superstars like Robert Downey Jr.,” said Don Nguyen, 55, a retired U.S. Air Force lieutenant colonel and cybersecurity consultant, who attended the party. He said that as someone who was part of the first generation of Vietnamese to join the U.S. military, he knows what it’s like to break barriers. “It’s a signal to the global community that we’ve arrived in Hollywood.”

“We have many talented doctors, lawyers, engineers [in the community]. But in films we’re still in the infant stage,” he said. He’s the son of Thanh Tuyen, a Vietnamese singer whose trademark Bolero songs were popular during the war.

Despite some of the generational differences, there is agreement in the community that this is a significant moment for Vietnamese representation in Hollywood that furthers their desire for more Vietnamese stories to be told.

And that’s what Viet Thanh Nguyen advocated for, to have the series, like his book, present a Vietnamese point of view on the war. He said that for too long, Hollywood has portrayed “Vietnamese characters to be killed, raped, wounded, silenced, demonized, or rescued while we serve as the backdrop for American moral dilemmas.” The war and its aftermath have been depicted in pop culture largely through an American lens in films such as “Apocalypse Now” and “Rambo.”

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“We should have at least as many Vietnamese perspectives on this war being told as we have American perspectives,” he said.

The cast of the series is predominantly Vietnamese, with Hoa Xuande, an Australian actor of Vietnamese descent, in the lead role as the Captain. Other actors in supporting roles include Kieu Chinh, Toan Le, Fred Nguyen Khan, Vy Le, Nguyen Cao Ky Duyen and Alan Trong.

“This is a historical moment for Vietnamese artists, writers and filmmakers in Hollywood,” said Chinh, an acclaimed Vietnamese actress who plays the mother of the Major (Phanxinê, a Vietnamese filmmaker in his acting debut), a character whose story comes into focus midseason. She knows firsthand what the war was like, having lived through it. The chaotic evacuation scene at the end of the first episode was familiar.

Kieu Chinh, left, with Phanxinê in a scene from “The Sympathizer.”

(Hopper Stone/HBO)

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“I heard loud bomb explosions all around us as we were trying to flee. It was frightening and very emotional,” Chinh said. “During the filming, I just relived my past. I didn’t have to act.”

The actor is well-known for her role as Suyuan Woo in 1993’s “The Joy Luck Club,” an adaptation of Amy Tan’s bestselling novel. It marked the first time that a film featuring a nearly all-Asian cast was a Hollywood box office success. However, despite the film’s success, it did not bring an increase in Asian-centered films or roles for Asian actors then. Chinh said she believes that “The Joy Luck Club” was too early for a breakthrough. Now, she thinks that it is time for a Vietnamese series to be featured on mainstream TV.

Anna Chi, a filmmaker whose work includes “The Disappearance of Mrs. Wu,” worked on “The Joy Luck Club” as a director’s assistant while studying at UCLA’s film school; she attended the viewing party with her husband, Douglas Smith, a visual-effects Oscar winner for “Independence Day.” She agrees with Chinh that “The Joy Luck Club” was ahead of its time. Although progress has been made, Chi said there is still much work to be done for Asian cinema. She sees “The Sympathizer” as an important step toward this goal.

While “The Sympathizer” isn’t the first time a story from a Vietnamese point of view has been told, previous efforts haven’t been as well received because of tensions that have lingered since the war. In January 1994, when Le Ly Hayslip, author of “When Heaven and Earth Changed Places,” visited Orange County on a press tour for the Oliver Stone film based on her memoir, dozens of protesters called her a traitor. It was billed as the first movie about the Vietnam War from a Vietnamese perspective, but anticommunist protesters were incensed that she had aided Viet Cong soldiers.

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The premiere of “The Sympathizer” comes two weeks before the 49th anniversary of the fall of Saigon on April 30, known as Black April or Tháng tư đen in Vietnamese. The Vietnam War, the second longest war in U.S. history, killed hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese people and American soldiers. For those who fought on the side of the South and were displaced, the wounds from the war remain unhealed.

“Viet sensationalized things to fit the American spy novel and from that perspective, the show is very intriguing to the viewers. He wrote it from the perspective of a Viet Cong communist spy and therefore the South Vietnamese were depicted as corrupted and cruel,” said Quan Nguyen, a physician and director of the Museum of the Republic of Vietnam, a nonprofit in Little Saigon in Orange County. It was opened in 2016 to honor veterans who fought for South Vietnam and to educate future generations.

“This could reopen a lot of deep wounds within our anticommunist community,” says Quan Nguyen, whose father was an army physician.

A man in a uniform hold a telephone receiver to his ear.

In “The Sympathizer,” Hoa Xuande plays the Captain, a communist spy in the South Vietnamese army.

(Hopper Stone/SMPSP/Hopper Stone/SMPSP)

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Jenny Thai, 58, a guest at the viewing party who is from Garden Grove, agrees. Thai said it has inspired her to make a film of her own that highlights South Vietnamese heroes. She recalls when she was a child in Vietnam, in the final days of the war, everyone was huddled around the radio and the announcement came that Saigon had fallen, and the adults around her broke down in tears. Weeks later, all the men and women associated with the former regime were sent to reeducation camps. She says her family later escaped Vietnam by boat in 1990.

“Most of the Saigoners stayed home and listened to the radio. It was the only way we could follow what was going on,” says Thai, who has produced short films. “Only a small portion of those who worked with the embassy or with U.S. officers knew about the evacuation.”

She adds, “I’m anticommunist, but I don’t hate the Northerners. We are all Vietnamese; we are all brothers and sisters from the same country. It’s the politics that destroyed us, the war.”

Though there are differing views, “The Sympathizer” has nonetheless spurred conversations about representation in Hollywood, how the story of the war is told and by whom. Ysa Le, executive director of the Vietnamese American Arts & Letters Association, a nonprofit that co-hosted a “Sympathizer” screening and press meeting with the show’s cast in Orange a week before its debut, says she welcomes the series.

“For the first time, we have so many Vietnamese talents, both in front of and behind the camera working on this American series,” said Le, 53, a pharmacist in Fountain Valley. She was 5 when the war ended, and her father was sent to a reeducation camp for six years after being unable to flee Vietnam.

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“It could inspire aspiring filmmakers to pursue their own projects,” Le said.

Phong Dinh, 91, a former two-term councilman of the seaside resort city of Vung Tau, Vietnam, who spent three years in a reeducation camp, said he understands the antipathy toward the communists, but the spy character created by Viet Thanh Nguyen and depicted in the series doesn’t bother him.

“It was a well-known fact they infiltrated our government since President [Ngo Dinh] Diem’s regime, and continued with President [Nguyen Van] Thieu,” he said. A father of seven, Dinh experienced tragedy after the war, losing his youngest daughter to malaria because no medication was available, and his wife suffered permanent hearing damage from an artillery explosion near their home.

Now a Huntington Beach resident, Dinh joined his youngest son, Viet, former Fox Corp. chief legal officer and U.S. assistant attorney general, to watch the premiere episode. He gave it an A+.

“Our people have suffered immeasurably. I’m blessed to have my family. I want my children and their children to be good citizens, contribute to society in America and help our people,” he said. “If this TV series opens doors for our younger Vietnamese, then it’s worth it.”

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