Linh, a disillusioned Vietnamese woman carrying out evictions for a landlord, is instructed to evict Vietnamese refugees. She must decide whether to follow through with their eviction or reject it in solidarity.
As cultural traditions are slowly becoming a burden of the past, a son returns home knowing that family is the only thing that binds him and his ailing father together.
Sister Tse is brought to New York by a Snakehead, a human smuggler. Although she is indebted to the crime family responsible for her transport, her survival instincts help her gain favor with the matriarch, and she rises quickly in the ranks. Soon Tse must reconcile her success with her real reason for coming to America—to find the child that was taken from her. In the end, Sister Tse must draw on the strength she found in transforming her victimhood into power.
Alfred “Boogie” Chin is a basketball phenom living in Queens, New York, who dreams of one day playing in the NBA. While his parents pressure him to focus on earning a scholarship to an elite college, Boogie must find a way to navigate a new girlfriend, high school, on-court rivals and the burden of expectation.
Perry Yung is an American actor and musician from Oakland, CA. He is best known as Father Jun on Cinemax's Bruce Lee drama Warrior, produced by Justin Lin, and as fan favorite Ping Wu on Steven Soderbergh's The Knick. Film roles include Condemned, The Jade Pendant, John Wick: Chapter 2, and Boogie, directed by Eddie Huang. Perry has been a core member of La Mama Theater's Great Jones Repertory Company of New York City since 1993.