Jump to content

Keye Luke (film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by ColRad85 (talk | contribs) at 08:24, 7 December 2015 (Disambiguated: Gordon JonesGordon Jones (actor)). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Keye Luke
Directed byTimothy Tau
Written byTimothy Tau
Ed Moy
Produced byTimothy Tau
StarringFeodor Chin
Kelvin Han Yee
Archie Kao
David Huynh
Mei Melancon
Jessika Van
Elaine Kao
Ina-Alice Kopp
Becky Wu
Cynthia San Luis
James Huang
Music byGeorge Shaw (Best Original Score, Asians on Film Festival)
Production
company
Firebrand Hand Creative
Running time
12 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Keye Luke is a 2012 American short film directed by Timothy Tau, written by Timothy Tau, Ed Moy and Feodor Chin, and produced by Timothy Tau.

Synopsis

The short film is a documentary and narrative hybrid bio-pic focusing on the earlier life and work of Keye Luke during the 1920s-1940s, a pioneering Asian American actor and painter most known for his roles as the Number One Son, Lee Chan, in the popular Charlie Chan films of the 1930s, and as the very first Kato in the 1940s Green Hornet, decades before Bruce Lee. It is to be noted that Luke shares a hometown with Lee (Seattle, Washington) and has several other similarities with Lee as well. Luke also played Detective James Lee Wong in the Phantom of Chinatown (1940), taking over the yellowface role of "Mr. Wong" (played by Boris Karloff) and becoming the first leading Asian American detective character in U.S. cinematic history. This role is covered in the film, as well as Luke's work in films such as Secret Agent X-9. Feodor Chin plays Keye Luke, Archie Kao plays Edwin Luke, the brother of Keye Luke, and Kelvin Han Yee plays Lee Luke, Keye Luke's father. Other actors play various real-life historical figures that were Luke's colleagues or family members, such as Elizabeth Sandy playing Luke's caucasian wife, Ethel Davis Luke.

Cast

Production

The film was initially made under a Visual Communications "Armed With A Camera" Fellowship for Emerging Media Artists, and a five-minute abbreviated version premiered at the 2012 Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival.[1][2][3] Many questions about the film's production are also answered in an extensive and in-depth Q&A done by the film's co-writer Ed Moy with director Timothy Tau.[4]

Awards and Screenings

Awards

The film won an Audience Award for best narrative short at a February 2014 monthly screening of the 2014 HollyShorts Film Festival.[5][6] The film also won a "Best Original Score" award for George Shaw's music, and also a Honorable Mention award for Best Ensemble Cast from the 2013 Asians on Film Festival.[7] The film has also been nominated for Best Documentary by the Dragon Con Film Festival.[8]

Screenings

The film has also screened at over a dozen film festivals worldwide, including the Los Angeles Asian Pacific Film Festival, the Asian American International Film Festival in New York, the HollyShorts Film Festival, the Dragon Con Independent Film Festival in Atlanta, Georgia, the Gen Con Indy Film Festival in Indianapolis, Indiana, the Boston Asian American Film Festival, the DisOrient Asian American Film Festival of Oregon, the Austin Asian American Film Festival, the ASEAN International Film Festival and Awards in Malaysia, and the 2013 Seattle Asian American Film Festival, where it was the Closing Night film.[9][10]

The film also screened at a University of Washington event in May to honor Asian Pacific American Heritage Month, alongside other films such as Aoki (a documentary on activist Richard Aoki by Ben Wang and Michael Chang) and Anna May Wong: In Her Own Words directed by Yunah Hong.[11]

The film also can be viewed online at DramaFever.[12]

Reception

Film Threat said that the film was "a quality short film, period" and "a mix of stage play, Hollywood re-enactment and historical lesson."[13] The London Film Review has stated that the film was "an entertaining, informative and fun short film" and a "brief, well constructed and poignant look at an actor at a certain period of his life," also adding that "a lot of film biographies could learn useful lessons from this short."[14] Rogue Cinema also commented that the film is "a glorious short made with depth and passion" and "a fabulous cinematic experience [that] should be mandatory viewing for all Cinephiles."[15] The film's trailer was also featured on Twitch[16] and /Film.[17]

The film and filmmaker Timothy Tau were also profiled in Seattle Metropolitan Magazine when the film was the Closing Night film of the 2013 Seattle Asian American Film Festival.[18]

Future plans

Tau has plans on extending the short film into a feature film about Keye Luke and other pioneering Asian American actors of his generation including Sessue Hayakawa, Anna May Wong and Philip Ahn.[19]

References

  1. ^ Christopher Stipp, /Film, This Week In Trailers: Keye Luke, Something from Nothing: The Art of Rap, Here, I Wish, The Angels' Share, http://www.slashfilm.com/week-trailers-keye-luke/
  2. ^ Todd Brown, Meet The Original Kato in Short Film Biopic Keye Luke, Twitch Film, http://twitchfilm.com/news/2012/04/meet-the-original-kato-in-short-film-biopic-keye-luke.php
  3. ^ Keye Luke - 2012 LA Asian Pacific Film Festival, http://laapff.festpro.com/films/detail/keye_luke_2012
  4. ^ Ed Moy, Writer's Journey: Q&A with 'Keye Luke' Director Timothy Tau, http://edmoy.blogspot.com/2012/04/q-with-keye-luke-director-timothy-tau.html
  5. ^ HollyShorts Returns 27th March at the TCL Chinese Theaters for Famed Monthly Screening Series, Congratulations to February’s Winners: 7pm – FAR – Directed by Brian Crewe, and 9:30pm – KEYE LUKE, Directed by Timothy Tau, HollyShorts http://hollyshorts.com/archives/1154
  6. ^ Keye Luke, Twitter Post on march 7 2014, https://twitter.com/KeyeLukeFilm/statuses/441859184175222784
  7. ^ Asians On Film Festival Awards – Winter 2013, http://www.asiansonfilm.com/2013/04/asians-on-film-festival-awards-winter-2013/
  8. ^ Dragon Con Film Festival, 2013 Awards, http://filmfest.dragoncon.org/all/awards/awards-2013/
  9. ^ KEYE LUKE - Trailer, https://vimeo.com/39922414
  10. ^ Moira Macdonald, The Seattle Times, Seattle Asian American Film Festival Gets Under Way, http://seattletimes.com/html/movies/2020207886_atatheater25columnxml.html
  11. ^ OCA Seattle Chapter, Event Info: Asian Americans in the Media, University of Washington, http://ocaseattle.org/2013/03/12/event-info-asian-americans-in-the-media/
  12. ^ DramaFever, Keye Luke, http://www.dramafever.com/drama/4411/1/Keye_Luke/
  13. ^ Film Threat Review, Keye Luke, 3.5 Stars, http://www.filmthreat.com/reviews/68261/
  14. ^ Dave Ollerton, Short Film Review: Keye Luke, The London Film Review, http://www.thelondonfilmreview.com/film-review/short-film-reviews/short-film-review-keye-luke/
  15. ^ Rogue Cinema, Film Review: Keye Luke (2012) – By Philip Smolen, http://www.roguecinema.com/keye-luke-2012-by-philip-smolen.html
  16. ^ Todd Brown, Meet The Original Kato in Short Film Biopic Keye Luke, Twitch Film, http://twitchfilm.com/news/2012/04/meet-the-original-kato-in-short-film-biopic-keye-luke.php
  17. ^ Christopher Stipp, /Film, This Week In Trailers: Keye Luke, Something from Nothing: The Art of Rap, Here, I Wish, The Angels' Share, http://www.slashfilm.com/week-trailers-keye-luke/
  18. ^ Seth Sommerfeld, Seattle Metropolitan Magazine, Kickstarting Kato: Timothy Tau Discusses His Short Film About Keye Luke, http://www.seattlemet.com/arts-and-entertainment/film/articles/timothy-tau-discusses-his-short-film-about-keye-luke
  19. ^ Ed Moy, Writer's Journey: Q&A with 'Keye Luke' Director Timothy Tau, http://edmoy.blogspot.com/2012/04/q-with-keye-luke-director-timothy-tau.html