• About
  • Contact
  • Write For Us
No Result
View All Result
Donate
The Asian Cut
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Essays
  • Director Retrospectives
  • Home
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Essays
  • Director Retrospectives
No Result
View All Result
The Asian Cut
No Result
View All Result

‘Shortcomings’ Is Critical of Positive Representation, Almost to a Fault

Rose Ho by Rose Ho
August 4, 2023
in Review
0
Justin H. Min as Ben and Sherry Cola as Alice in SHORTCOMINGS.

Photo by Jon Pack / Sony Pictures Classics

⭐⭐⭐

Rating: 3 out of 5.

Adapted from Adrian Tomine’s graphic novel, Randall Park’s directorial debut Shortcomings stars Justin H. Min, Sherry Cola, and Ally Maki. The film follows the trajectory of an Asian-American man navigating career and romantic failures in sunny California. Ben (Min) is a bitter, sarcastic, and insufferable cinephile whose girlfriend Miko (Maki) departs for a months-long internship in New York, leaving him to his own devices. His queer and quippy best friend Alice (Cola) helpfully indulges him in some of his worst qualities while trying to give him some actual life advice along the way. Shortcomings also features Debby Ryan, Tavi Gevinson, Sonoya Mizuno, Jacob Batalon, Stephanie Hsu, and Ronny Chieng.

Not afraid to pull its punches, the film draws upon Ben’s worst impulses and overly critical thoughts regarding subjects like Asian representation in Western media or mixed-race relationships. These topics instigate the kinds of debates that people in the Asian community quietly have behind closed doors or think silently to themselves for fear of getting cancelled, yet the story pulls them to the forefront of Ben’s characterization.

At first, it feels like the movie is trying to let these arguments breathe on their own merit, but it soon becomes clear that Ben is just wrong and stubborn. His tirades about hating the movie’s stand-in for Crazy Rich Asians (too mainstream for him), his hypocritical analysis of white men dating Asian women (while he pursues dating white women himself), and his glaring personality flaws — a terrible short-temper, irritatingly mocking tone, and self-centredness coming from a place of intense self-loathing — build toward his virtual unbearableness.

RelatedStories

Sopheanith Thong and Deka Nine as Nisay and Thida in Whisperings of the Moon, having an intimate conversation at an amusement park.

Inside Out 2026 Review: ‘Whisperings of the Moon’ Forever Memorialises Its Late Director

Shim Eun-kyung as Li in Two Seasons Two Strangers

Where Words Fail, ‘Two Seasons, Two Strangers’ Connects

While Ben’s judgy, mean-spirited, combative energy makes him deeply unpleasant to be around, Min’s moments of charm, especially in his lighter scenes with Cola or the scenes where he is simply alone and depressed, are just enough to keep him empathetic. And it helps that he gets taken down a peg by some fiery and intelligent women. Honestly, viewers will want to applaud every woman who gets fed up with him and walks away. Wrangling the political themes into the personal using such an unlikeable character as the central study is a feat, and while the movie struggles to make it work a hundred percent of the time, it doesn’t quite fail either.

There are some jokes and references throughout the beginning of Shortcomings that are a little too heavy handed and on the nose (Batalon’s character mentions liking the new Spider-Man film, for example) and some art direction choices that are a little too cutesy, namely those pastel-coloured chapter breaks, which feel like there were a few too many ideas floating around, but the film eventually finds its footing and sticks the ending of this anti-rom-com rom-com.

By allowing Asian characters to behave badly and be surrounded by other Asians — a trend that we hope doesn’t end, especially as it brings us phenomenally sharp, funny, and entertaining content like BEEF and Joy Ride — we can finally assess the shortcomings of media without making it just about race (or nationality or gender or sexuality); and you can’t fault this film for that.

Now Streaming On

JustWatch

The Review

Tags: Ally MakiJustin H. MinRandall ParkSherry ColaShortcomingsUSA
ShareTweet
Rose Ho

Rose Ho

Rose Ho is a film critic. After her art criticism degree, she started her personal film blog, Rose-Coloured Ray-Bans, and joined the visual arts editorial team of LooseLeaf Magazine by Project 40 Collective, a creative platform for Canadian artists and writers of pan-Asian background. In 2020, she received the Emerging Critic Award from the Toronto Film Critics Association.

Recommended For You

Meaghan Rath as Anushka Bhattachera-Phister and Curtis Lum as Tim Kwan sitting at a table in The Audacity
Interview

Curtis Lum Discusses ‘The Audacity’ and the Thrill of Playing the Corporate Climber

April 14, 2026
Dinner scene at a restaurant in Ang Lee's The Wedding Banquet.
Review

Ang Lee Marries Eastern and Western Expectations in ‘90s Queer Rom-Com ‘The Wedding Banquet’

Keanu Reeves as John Wick walking through a church wearing a black suit like a bad ass in the movie John Wick: Chapter 4.
Review

‘John Wick: Chapter 4’ Finds the Franchise’s Equilibrium

Bloom Li as Chang and friends in Chang Can Dunk Disney movie.
Review

‘Chang Can Dunk’ All Over Your Expectations

Heather Touniou as Tarita and Billy Zane as Marlon Brando on a beach in Waltzing with Brando
Review

Tia Carrere Embraces the Excess of ‘Waltzing with Brando’

Lee Byung-hun as Yoo Man-su holding a flower pot over his head in No Other Choice
Best Of

The Asian Cut’s Favourite Movies of 2025

March 16, 2026
Next Post
Sidonie in Japan

Venice Film Festival 2023: 'Sidonie in Japan' Brings Levity To Grief

Popular Stories

Co-Director and director Sook-Yin Lee of Paying For It.

Sook-Yin Lee On Adapting ‘Paying For It’ With a ‘Rashomon’ Spin

1 year ago
Romain Duris and Mei Cirne-Masuki in A Missing Part.

TIFF 2024: ‘A Missing Part’ Artfully Tells the Story of a Foreigner and a Father

Takeshi Kaneshiro and Brigitte Lin in Chungking Express

Criterion Recollection: Healing Heartbreaks in ‘Chungking Express’

Yuta (Hayato Kurihara) and Kou (Yukito Hidaka) enjoying techno music in Happyend.

‘Happyend’ Glorifies and Grieves That Final Year of High School

V.T. Nayani on a film set.

Art As And Within Community: A Conversation With Writer, Director and Producer V.T. Nayani

3 years ago
  • About
  • Contact
  • Write For Us

Copyright © The Asian Cut 2026. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Reviews
  • Interviews
  • Essays
  • Director Retrospectives
  • Write For Us
  • Contact

Copyright © The Asian Cut 2026. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use