The Asian Film Festival of Dallas returns this week for its 22nd edition. The event runs Thursday to Sunday at the Dallas Angelika Film Center and features more than 15 short and feature films.
Most of the festival’s feature films come from Asia, with Japan, China and South Korea well represented. Korea leads the way with 7 feature films, including the opening night selection: Tae-Jim Ahn’s The Night Owl. Ahn’s film was the fifth-highest grossing Korean film of 2022. It also won three awards, including Best Film at the 59th Baeksang Arts Awards.
The closing night selection is another South Korean film: Park Dong-hee’s first feature movie, Drive. It will be shown with the short film Please Hold the Line from Malaysian director Tan Ce Ding.
Other highlights are two screenings featuring filmmaker Q&As. Director Sing J. Lee will be on hand after his The Accidental Getaway Driver screens 7:15 p.m. Saturday. And director Linh Tran will be at the Sunday 2:30 p.m. showing of her film Waiting for the Light to Change.
Both of those films have found success at other festivals. Lee won the 2023 Sundance Film Festival’s Directing Award in the U.S. Dramatic competition for his movie. And Tran won the Grand Jury Prize for Narrative Film with Waiting for the Light to Change at this year’s Slamdance Film Festival.
The festival also includes 12 short films by students, with a variety of directors from the D-FW area. The student films open the festival 12:30 p.m. Thursday and range from nearly 15 minutes to as short as 46 seconds. The entire showing is scheduled to take just over an hour.
Details:
When: July 13-16
Where: Dallas Angelika Film Center (5321 E. Mockingbird Lane, #230)
Tickets: Available online or at the box office. Prices vary for each showing.
Check out the full lineup and schedule online.