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SNAKEHEAD: Shuya Chang Challenges The Underworld In The Official Trailer

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Per Collider‘s exclusive on Tuesday, Samuel Goldwyn Films and Roadside Attractions proudly unveiled the official trailer for its October release of Evan Jackson Leong’s new crime thriller, Snakehead. The film just had its run at the New York Asian Film Festival and will soon garner attention beforehand at the 46th edition of the Toronto International Film Festival, whose own Robyn Citizen cites the following about the project in her programming notes:

A woman rises through the ranks of the gang that smuggled her into New York City, in Evan Jackson Leong’s fact-based debut feature.

A decade-long labour of love for documentary filmmaker Evan Jackson Leong (Linsanity, 1040: Christianity in the New Asia), Snakehead is inspired by the real-life Cheng Chui Ping, a.k.a. Sister Ping, who ran one of the largest snakehead operations — gang-led human-smuggling rackets — for nearly 20 years before her arrest, as well as other ripped-from-the-headlines stories of human smuggling and organized crime in New York City’s Chinatown. Sister Tse (Shuya Chang) pays a snakehead to get her to New York City so she can search for her daughter, who was adopted by a Chinese American family while Tse was in prison. Uninterested in working at a massage parlour to pay back her astronomical smuggling debt, Sister Tse earns the respect of gang matriarch Dai Mah (Jade Wu) through her rebelliousness. Sister Tse quickly rises through the ranks, upsetting Dai Mah’s reckless but ambitious older son, Rambo (Sung Kang of Fast & Furious fame).

Chang delivers a fiercely confident breakout performance as Sister Tse; Wu plays Dai Mah as, in turns, maternal and menacing. They are master and protégé — will they navigate their criminal world of loyalty, betrayals, and violent reprisals as allies or adversaries?

Leong’s début feature offers timely, unflinching depictions of an underworld system of smugglers enabled by increasingly restrictive immigration policies. This investigation is filtered through the personal — shared confessions of hopes between the victims of the snakehead operations — and through moments of unexpected beauty, splashes of reds against desaturated hues and concrete, noir lighting, and lush slow-motion action. As Sister Tse becomes poised to take back everything she lost in her journey to the United States, the real power may lie in what she chooses to give away.

Read our review of Evan Jackson Leong’s Snakehead and set your calendars for the film’s theatrical, on Digital, and On-Demand release on October 29 from Samuel Goldwyn Films and Roadside Attractions.

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