The Wedding Banquet


04:35 am - 06:20 am, Thursday, December 18 on Paramount+ with SHOWTIME (East) ()

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About this Broadcast
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After his boyfriend rejects his marriage proposal, Min convinces his best friend Angela to marry him for his green card and offers to pay for her partner's IVF treatment in return. Their lives are turned upside down when the former's grandmother arrives in Seattle to throw them an extravagant Korean wedding banquet.

2025 English Stereo
Comedy Romance Drama Other

Cast & Crew
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Bowen Yang (Actor) .. Chris
Kelly Marie Tran (Actor) .. Angela
Lily Gladstone (Actor) .. Liz
Yeo-Jong Yun (Actor) .. Grandmother
Joan Chen (Actor)
Nick Preston (Actor) .. Stanley
Marlee Walchuk (Actor) .. Marge
Lily Yawson (Actor) .. Doctor
Mia Golden (Actor) .. Clerk

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Han Gi-chan (Actor)
Bowen Yang (Actor) .. Chris
Kelly Marie Tran (Actor) .. Angela
Born: January 17, 1989
Birthplace: San Diego, California, United States
Trivia: Daughter of Vietnamese parents.Studied piano, drama and voice in high school.Former member of the musical improv group Hug Bear.Studied acting at Lesly Kahn and Co.Studied improv at the Upright Citizens Brigade and The Second City.Had not seen a Star Wars film before getting the script for Star Wars: Episode VIII - The Last Jedi (2017).Told her family she was filming an independent film in Canada when she was actually filming Star Wars: Episode VIII - The Last Jedi (2017).The first Asian-American woman featured in a Star Wars film.
Lily Gladstone (Actor) .. Liz
Yeo-Jong Yun (Actor) .. Grandmother
Joan Chen (Actor)
Born: April 26, 1961
Birthplace: Shanghai, China
Trivia: Joan Chen has been one of a very few actors to have a viable career both in Hollywood and in Hong Kong. Whether playing a wizened Vietnamese peasant woman or the doomed Empress of China, she lends her characters a natural elegance and a beguiling vulnerability.Chen was born tp a family of doctors on April 26, 1961, in Shanghai, China. She tasted fame early in her life when she made her film debut in Xie Jin's Youth (1976) at age 14. She soon enrolled in the prestigious Shanghai Foreign Language Institute while making a couple more feature films, including Zhang Zheng's Little Flower (1979), which eventually won her a Best Actress Prize at the Hundred Flowers Awards (the Mainland Chinese equivalent of the Oscars). Having reached the pinnacle of fame in her own country, Chen made the unusual step to leave China -- not for Hong Kong as many later Chinese stars such as Gong Li and Jet Li did -- but for the United States. While studying at California State University in Northridge, she landed a small role in Wayne Wang's Dim Sum: A Little Bit of Heart (1985), a gentle portrait of Chinese-American family life.In true Hollywood style, she was summarily cast as May-May in the adventure-epic Tai-Pan (1986) after being spotted in the Lorimar parking lot. Though it was savaged by critics (Leonard Maltin called it "silly") and bombed at the box-office, Tai-Pan did allow Chen to segue into her breakthrough role. As Empress Wan Jung in Bernardo Bertolucci's Oscar-award winning The Last Emperor (1987), Chen brilliantly played a woman whose love and life are tragically destroyed by China's rigidly patriarchal culture and the machinations of fate. Hollywood roles being notoriously hard to land for Asian and Asian-American actors, Chen's newfound fame did not immediately lead to better movie offers. She appeared in such low-budget fare as The Blood of Heroes (1989) before she attracted public attention again as Josie Packard in David Lynch's TV series Twin Peaks. In 1993, she played a Vietnamese mother who suffers for a lifetime in a country at war in Oliver Stone's Heaven and Earth.That same year, she returned to Asia to make a pair of critically successful films. She played a supernatural temptress in Clara Law's Temptation of a Monk (1993), a historical epic with the sweep and visual flare of a Sergio Leone film with a pronounced erotic edge. The role was a brave one to tackle as it not only featured Chen as the movie's clear villain, but it also featuring an unusually graphic sex scene for a mainstream Chinese film. In Stanley Kwan's Red Rose, White Rose (1994), which was nominated for Berlin's Golden Bear, Chen played another deliciously evil vixen opposite Winston Chao. For her effort, she won a Best Actress Golden Horse award, Taiwan's equivalent of the Oscar. Her return to the U.S. was marked by another succession of subpar flicks, including On Deadly Ground (1994) and Judge Dredd (1995). Chen also co-produced and starred in The Wild Side (1995), a lesbian romantic thriller in which she played opposite a still-in-the-closet Anne Heche.In 1998, Chen made her directorial debut with Xiu Xiu: The Sent Down Girl, a lyrical, harrowing tale about the loss of innocence and respect during the tumult of the Chinese cultural revolution. Featuring sumptuous cinematography and subtle, remarkably assured direction, Xiu Xiu won armfuls of international prizes, including a virtual sweep of the Golden Horse awards and a nomination for a Golden Bear at the Berlin Film Festival. In 1999, Chen climbed back into the director's chair and began production of Autumn in New York, starring Richard Gere and Winona Ryder.Over the next several years, Chen would cement her position as one of the most loved and respected actresses in film, especially on the Eastern side of the globe, appearing in movies like Sunflower, Lust, Caution, Love in Disguise, and 1911.
Nick Preston (Actor) .. Stanley
Marlee Walchuk (Actor) .. Marge
Lily Yawson (Actor) .. Doctor
Mia Golden (Actor) .. Clerk

Before / After
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Wakefield
02:45 am