Saturday, October 19

Part 2: 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm
AARP sponsored film shorts featuring “It’s Never too Late Theme” including Q&A with filmmakers Tracy Quan-Nichols, Jiming Sun Lidal, Kayli Kimura, Patty Fong, and Sybil Wendler

It’s never too late shorts:
7 film shorts

These selected film shorts will inspire you to never give up at any age.

Screening of these shorts are being sponsored by AARP of Califonia

THE FILMS

  • American Daydream

    An undocumented immigrant has always relied heavily on her legal daughter to get through life in America. Now that The obedient daughter wants to leave to pursue her own dreams. How is this illiterate mother going to survive?

  • The Carry On Story

    Carry On was a garage band in Los Angeles during the Asian American dance era 1965-1985. The era was a right of passage and undoubtedly the best times of our lives. Carry On was the most popular band of the era. They performed at hundreds of dances held at dance halls and ballrooms. This is their story.

  • It's Never Too Late To Live Your Dream

    As a child, Parker Dean loved to paint. This passion remained with him throughout his life. He had a successful career but it left him with no time for his art. See how he made decisions in his life that brought joy to both him and his community.

  • Fragmented

    In an Asian American family, a devoted wife cares for her frail husband in the late stage of dementia. As she recalls hard and happy times during their marriage, she is reminded of why she perseveres and finds hope in their enduring love.

  • SANSEDAI (三世代)

    Through intimate conversations over old photobooks and home movies from the 1930s, SANSEDAI (三世代) explores themes of identity and belonging as it follows the filmmaker’s 92-year-old grandmother’s journey growing up during war, migrating to a country that was once deemed an enemy, and what it means to be Japanese-American.

  • Stories Told, Secrets Kept

    Many Chinese family immigration stories are entwined within the United States exclusion era. Some of the laws almost entirely banned Chinese from entering the country. Wing and Young Shee Leong implemented complicated measures in order to start their life in the United States. Their story was a secret until now.

  • Follow the Sun

    Born in postwar Japan, Akemi searches for the unknown American sailor who was her biological father. At age 65, she embarks on a journey of discovery with her sister using DNA data and US census records from the 1940s. Their findings lead them to a new set of family and shed light on a long-forgotten love affair that changed the course of their lives.

Q&A GUESTS

  • Tracy Quan-Nichols - DIRECTOR, It's Never to Late to Live Your Dream

    Tracy Quan is ethnically Chinese and born in Vietnam. Growing up in Da Nang, she lived in a tight Chinese community attending Chinese school and learning Chinese, Vietnamese, and some English. Life was great until the Vietnam War. Along with her family, Tracy luckily escaped Vietnam by boat. Nowadays, America is home. For that reason and more, Tracy feels blessed and grateful.

  • Kayli Kimura

    Kayli Kimura - Director, SANSEDAI (三世代)

    Kayli Kimura is a Japanese-American creative director, visual storyteller, and talent manager. Her work spans across various genres with a focus on non-fiction storytelling and musically-driven films. In addition to her directorial and cinematography work, Kayli worked in the camera department for a variety of commercials, TV shows, documentaries and music videos including projects for Netflix, Hulu, Food Network, PBS, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Telfar. Kayli is the creative director and manager for Queens, NY-born, Nigerian-American rapper, AKINYEMI. Kayli was born and raised in Boulder, CO and recently relocated to LA after living in NYC for almost 5 years. She graduated from Bowdoin College in Maine with majors in Sociology and Environmental Studies and a minor in Music.

  • Patty Fong

    Patty Fong - Director, Stories Told, Secrets Kept

    Coming soon

  • Sybil Wendler

    Sybil Wendler - Director, Follow the Sun

    Sybil Wendler is a filmmaker based in San Diego, California. Past work includes her award-winning documentary, Once Upon a Rooftop, a film that presents an intimate look at the haphazard dwellings illegally erected on top of old buildings that are scattered across Hong Kong. These rooftop tenements shelter mostly migrants coming from Mainland China who are the working-poor of this privileged city. She has also collaborated with the highly acclaimed conceptual artist, Eleanor Antin, in a joint directorial art film entitled Fragments of a Revolution that centers on Antin’s metaphorical characters that blend history with fantasy. Sybil's current documentary, Follow the Sun, continues a cinematic practice that is grounded in a social discourse on the themes of belonging and cultural identity. Her work is further influenced by the literary movement of magical realism, crafting films that reflect a beguiling dance between the empirical world and the imaginary.

  • Moderator - David Louie

    David Louie is a retired business and tech reporter at KGO-TV in San Francisco. He retired from the Disney-ABC owned station in 2022 after 50 years of service. A Chinese American, he became the first Asian American to report on-air at KGO-TV in 1972. Louie was part of the first local TV news team to report from China in 1979, one year after the normalization of relations with the U.S. Louie has been honored with numerous accolades through the years, including regional Emmys and the Governors’ Award, the highest honor bestowed by the San Francisco/Northern California Chapter of The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences (NATAS). He was also inducted into the Golden Circle and Silver Circle for his contributions to the northern California television industry. Louie has had a remarkable career influencing other journalists as the national president of the Asian American Journalists Association (AAJA), national chairman of NATAS, and a long-time board member of the Radio Television Digital News Association. Louie continues to mentor and to volunteer for AAPI organizations. He has endowed a journalism scholarship for AAPI students at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism.