In her moving sophomore feature film, "The Farewell," writer/director Lulu Wang dives into the specific and the personal to unearth universal nuggets of divine truth about family, faith and fear.
At the beginning, the movie announces it's "based on a real lie." Wang reveals it's about her own family, a "good lie" they once chose to tell.
In "The Farewell," Chinese American New Yorker Billi (Awkwafina) is wracked with guilt when her family collectively decides to hide her beloved grandmother's terminal lung cancer diagnosis from her.
The family solemnly gathers at Grandma Nai Nai's home under the pretense that Billi's cousin, Haohao (Han Chen), is marrying his Japanese girlfriend of three months, Aiko (Aoi Mizuhara).
The family savors their last few moments with Nai Nai (the luminous, delightful Shuzhen Zhao), transferring their grief and celebration of her remarkable life through the preparations for the wedding.
They seem superstitious that if Nai Nai discovers her diagnosis, she'll die. Not of cancer, but of fear. But the carefree Nai Nai remains as spunky as ever, just a bit winded, even though her children and grandchildren look positively stricken at seemingly every last hug and bite of meat pie.
The goodbye ruse at the center of "The Farewell" is the vessel for Billi to return to her family roots and reconnect with her Chinese heritage, to process the trauma of immigrating to the West as a child.
The perfectly cast Awkwafina ("Crazy Rich Asians") portrays Billi as the embodiment of what it means to be both Chinese and American, not just in her code-switching but in her belief systems.