In some way, Wang is following a tried-and-tested career path, lionising his generation much as George Lucas did in 1973's American Graffiti and Richard Linklater did with 1993's Dazed and Confused. (It's just that the hangout spot of choice has shifted online, no longer the diner or football field but messageboards and IM chat windows.) That Didi felt flimsier to me than either of those examples is down to what feels like fairly rote Sundance scripting, setting out experience without shape or much in the way of dramatic roughage. Wang constructs the film as a series of pivotal moments: a sister going off to college; MySpace dying, Facebook speeding up to take its place; Chris falling out with his childhood friends, and in with some older boys. It's vaguely novel that our focal point should be kind of a weirdo: that Didi remains likable has much to do with the way Wang cops to having once been a massive dork and ingrate. Yet any drama here feels like a done deal. We know this kid survived to tell these tales, and the prevailing geniality reassures us nothing unduly terrible is going to befall his younger incarnation, however brattily he may act up. (The more revealing comparison point may not be The Fabelmans, rather James Gray's Armageddon Time.) The stronger material and performances fade into the background: the mother's thwarted dreams of becoming a painter, for example, most touchingly articulated by Chen whenever Didi isn't too busy at the skatepark hunting for LOLs. Somewhere in here, there's a recognition that the son has been given an opportunity his mother never had: the older Wang sees it, and is grateful for it, but can't develop it on screen beyond the occasional poignant gesture. As a result, Didi settles benignly into the cinematic centre ground, a bean bag for viewers to collapse into at the end of the working day. It's not unpleasant at all, but also not as distinctive as Sundance may have framed it as. I also wonder whether this is another example of a movie that's been trumped by TV - and more specifically Fresh Off the Boat, the great Nahnatchka Khan's adaptation of Eddie Huang's memoir of growing up Taiwanese-American in the Florida of the 1990s. Wang gives good hugs, but Khan and Huang added big laughs and unexpected insights.
Didi is available on DVD via Mediumrare from Monday.
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