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Independent Films

Review: “Starring Jerry as Himself” Blends Fact and Fiction in a Tale of Scams and Family

Inspired by the tale of a Taiwanese American immigrant retiree, “Starring Jerry as Himself” captivates with authentic acting and masterful staging. 

By , 27 Jul 23 00:01 GMT
Courtesy of Visit Films.

Starring Jerry as Himself is a masterful film, standing at the intersection of documentary and fiction.

The movie follows Taiwanese immigrant retiree Jerry Liu, who lives in Florida. Liu is divorced from his wife, but has a good relationship with her. However, Liu is somewhat distant from the three sons that he had with his wife. Though he sees one regularly, as they are busy with work or their own families.

One day, Jerry receives a message from a man claiming to be Chinese law enforcement. The man alleges that Jerry has become implicated in a money laundering case and that, to clear his name and avoid being extradited to China, he will need to follow their instructions.

Subsequently, Jerry is implicated in what at first seems like a scam. As a result,  Jerry loses his life savings, as the  two men claiming to be Chinese law enforcement tell him that he needs to sell his stocks and transfer funds to a bank account under their control in order to prove his innocence.

Courtesy of Visit Films.

This story blends fact and fiction. For one, Jerry Liu plays himself, and was actually a victim of a Chinese fraud ring in real life. It is somewhat unclear in the film why a Taiwanese person would fall for a Chinese scam ring, but it is suggested that Liu had business dealings in China before retirement. His children also appear in the movie as themselves. The family, which works in the film industry, was later motivated to make the film about Jerry being scammed out of his life savings.

Reflecting real-world social problems, there have been an increasing number of Sinophone films about the elderly being scammed out of their savings in recent years, such as The Empty Nest and Reclaim. But such films have not always been successful in their depiction of how scam artists work, in that elderly characters are usually shown as in full command of their cognitive facilities–until they aren’t.

Starring Jerry as Himself stands out because it draws viewers into the inner workings of Jerry’s mental state as he becomes implicated in the scam. This is accomplished through staging Jerry’s imagination of the fraudsters as police officers in Shanghai–later on in the film, Jerry remarks that he felt like he was in a spy movie when the fraudsters  asked him to carry out various tasks.

Courtesy of Visit Films.

The con artists depicted in Starring Jerry as Himself also feel like figments of a cinematic epic. In contrast with all the other characters who live mundane lives in Florida, the two fake police officers have movie star-level good looks. Furthermore, as the lonely and isolated Jerry starts believing the initially sympathetic fraudsters, the fraudsters start appearing in Jerry’s everyday Florida environments, albeit in staged encounters.

This innovative staging  makes Starring Jerry as Himself work especially well as a film. Moreover, the presence of the real-world Jerry, his ex-wife, and his children lends the film a great deal of emotional resonance, with real intimacy between the characters. But, to this extent, Starring Jerry as Himself also benefits from the skill of the actors playing the other characters, with Haosong Yang channeling his inner Tony Leung to play “Officer Zhang” and Nick Bailey managing a wonderful turn as a bank teller that interacts with Jerry, who Jerry comes to suspect is part of a conspiracy against him.

Courtesy of Visit Films.

Starring Jerry as Himself can be situated alongside other Asian American films in recent years that aim to explore the perspectives of parents–the most famous of which may be Everything Everywhere All at Once. The film manages to do this so well because of its clear affection for its subject.

But, similar to  the plot of Tigertail, the film suggests that  Jerry gave up his own creative ambitions to work and save for his children, and that the movie is itself the product of his later return to these ambitions. Furthermore, the film also shows how Jerry is forced to contemplate the validity of thinking about family relationships in material terms, as often occurs when Asian American parents spend their entire lives toiling on behalf of family members; few other Asian American films in this vein contain such reflections.

As such, Starring Jerry as Himself is a remarkable accomplishment, standing head and shoulders above other films that have engaged with similar topics. It is definitely worth a view.

• • •


Starring Jerry As Himself—United States. Dialog in English and Mandarin. Directed by Law Chen. First released January 21, 2023. Running time 1h 35min. Starring Jerry C. Hsu, Fang Du, Jesse Hsu, Jonathan Hsu, Kathy Hsu, Haosong Yang, Nick Bailey. 

This article is part of Cinema Escapist’s dedicated coverage of the 2023 Asian American International Film Festival.

This article is also published in No Man Is An Island, an online publication focused on the connections between everyday life and politics. No Man Is An Island is brought to you by the team behind New Bloom Magazine.

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