This is a beautiful, aching film that treats its audience—and its subject matter—with intelligence and respect. It's not a kids' movie, but it's an excellent choice for tweens, teens, and families ready to have real conversations about death, cultural differences, and what it means to love someone.
The 97% critic score isn't hype—this is genuinely well-crafted cinema that happens to be accessible and moving. Awkwafina is phenomenal, the family feels real, and the film never takes the easy way out by declaring one cultural approach 'right' and the other 'wrong.'
That said, it's slow, it's sad, and it requires reading subtitles. Younger kids or those expecting something light will check out. But for the right audience—mature tweens through adults—this is the kind of film that sticks with you and opens up meaningful family discussions about values, culture, and how we face the hardest parts of life.





