
Tigertail 4 stars
The Netflix movie Tigertail is a drama about one man’s journey through life as an immigrant from Taiwan to America and the questioning of one’s choices through life. It’s a well-constructed story done in non-linear fashion going from Pin-Jui’s childhood on a Taiwanese farm until his old age in America. We see him as a carefree young man in the sixties who loves to dance with his girlfriend, but lives in poverty with his mother and works in a factory. Pin-Jui decides to give up this life for the promise of something better in America but does so by accepting and arranged marriage to the daughter of a wealthy businessman. In scenes flashing forward we see him as an older man in his seventies who lives alone and is questioning the choices he has made. Through his unwillingness to open-up and show any emotion with his family, he has pushed them all out of his life. The question becomes can he make amends before it is too late. The movie is both about how we treat loved ones and about what an immigrant can give up in their quest for a seemingly better life in America. It’s a worthwhile film, but the sequence of scenes the director uses will require the viewer to pay close attention to the screen. Tigertail is mostly in Chinese with subtitles and it appears to be Alan Yang’s first directorial effort.