Snakehead is the crime saga the debut feature film of writer and director by Evan Jackson Leong is as much about the gritty underworld of human trafficking, as it is about the emotional toll being an immigrant takes on the psyche. Through his main female characters Sister Tse (Shuya Chang) and Dai Mah (Jade Wu) audiences see the generational gap of the new and old.
Desperate to find and reconnect with her daughter after eight years of separation, Sister Tse puts her life in the hands of Snakeheads – Chinese smugglers to traffic illegal immigrants – to the cost of $57,000. Refusing to repay the debt through sex work, Sister Tse works to get in good with the head of the criminal enterprise, Dai Mah , and earn her way out by using her street smarts, keen observational skills and will. As Sister Tse grows closer to Dai Mah she begins to consider whether the woman who has the power to get her killed is worth trusting, and Dai Mah learns that the way she thinks the way the world works, isn’t necessarily true. As these two women get into a power struggle, Dai Mah’s son Rambo (Sung Kang) begins to make his own moves, that could put everyone and everything in danger with their community and the law.
In her conversation with Chang and Wu for Carolyn Talks…, they speak about playing their multi-dimensional characters who do what they can to stay on top in a world dominated by men. They also spoke about how being Women of Color and immigrants informed their performances and helped them to relate to their characters, and work in the North American film industry.
Snakehead released into theatres, on Digital and On Demand October 29, 2021.