6.6
When Audrey's business trip to Asia goes sideways, she enlists the aid of Lolo, her irreverent, childhood best friend who also happens to be a hot mess; Kat, her college friend turned Chinese soap star; and Deadeye, Lolo's eccentric cousin. Their no-holds-barred, epic experience becomes a journey of bonding, friendship, belonging, and wild debauchery that reveals the universal truth of what it means to know and love who you are.
Ashley Park
Audrey
Sherry Cola
Lolo
Stephanie Hsu
Kat
Sabrina Wu
Deadeye
David Denman
Joe Sullivan
Annie Mumolo
Mary Sullivan
Chris Pang
Kenny
Isla Rose Hall
Audrey (Age 12)
Chloe Pun
Lola (age 12)
Desmond Chiam
Clarence
Alexander Hodge
Todd
Nicholas Carella
Kevin
Debbie Fan
Jenny Chen
Meredith Hagner
Jess
Daniel Dae Kim
Dae
Ronny Chieng
Chao
Timothy Simons
Frank
Kenneth Liu
Wey Chen
Victor Lau
Jiaying
Rohain Arora
Arvind
Lori Tan Chinn
Nai Nai Chen
Baron Davis
Baron Davis
Michelle Choi-Lee
Min Park
Kellen Bruce
White Boy
Kalayna Kozak
Swinging Kid
Nathan Parrott
White Boy #1
Beckam Crawford
White Boy #2
Nick Fontaine
Mike
Mengxi Zhang
K-Pop Girl
Chris Wong
TV Show Villain
Katie Chong
TV Show PA
Mike Ching
Businessman
Alan Tang
Businessman
Paul Chieng
Train Police Officer
Darryl Quon
Old Guy in Boat
Jasper Chen
Deng Moto Driver
Jian Ning Zheng
Grandpa Chien
Samuel Li
Game Playing Chen Cousin
Julia Gao
Little Chen Girl
Lillian Lim
Helen
Ash Lee
Security Guard
Johnny Wu
Xing Xing
Brianna Kim
Korean Woman
Johnny Yao
Chinese Reporter
Lana Jalissa
Filipino Reporter
June Fukumura
Japanese Reporter
Sunghee Lapell
Mrs. Hee Hee
Andrew Woo
Barista
Dyne Hong
Agency Woman
CJ Damaso
K-Pop Dancer
Joyce Nguyen
K-Pop Dancer
Joshua Candelaria
K-Pop Dancer
Everest Shi
K-Pop Dancer
Director, Story
Adele Lim
Screenplay, Story
Cherry Chevapravatdumrong
Screenplay, Story
Teresa Hsiao
July 8, 2023
8
Bawdy, raunchy humor generally isn’t my style, but, when it’s done with wit, creativity and no-holds-barred originality, it gets my attention quickly, which this filmmaking debut from writer- director Adele Lim captures from the very first line of the picture (and never lets go thereafter). This rapid-fire screwball comedy follows the exploits of four young Asian women (Ashley Park, Sherry Cola, Sabrina Wu, Stephanie Hsu) on an outlandish road trip through China that steadily deteriorates but routinely places them in a host of raucously hilarious, debauchery-riddled situations. In doing so, the film steadily serves up huge laughs in a story that’s accurately being billed as a release unlike anything that moviegoers have seen before. While it’s true that the narrative stretches credibility a bit at times and the film has its share of predictable and sweet but sappy moments, those minor faults are vastly overshadowed by its many strengths, including its fine ensemble cast, balanced pacing, and vibrant, colorful, superbly crafted production design. Because of the nature of the humor, however, sensitive viewers may want to skip this one (though it’s truly hard not to laugh, no matter how conservative one’s views might be). “Joy Ride” may not have received much fanfare or pre-release publicity, but it’s one of the funniest comedies to come along in quite some time, and it’s handily one of the best offerings of what has thus far been an otherwise-stunningly disappointing summer movie season. Indeed, get ready to seriously laugh your ass off with this one.