Q&A with John Cho

March 14, 2008

On the highly anticipated return of Harold and Kumar:

“I feel like it’s the same personality for the second movie. We just ramped up the stakes and made bigger explosions basically. I think we’ve topped ourselves even in the social and political jokes department and I’m happy with it. Very, very happy.”

On his West 32nd experience:

“I’ve been getting a lot of what I like to call Koreatown scripts over the years from Asian American writers who wanted to do a story in Koreatown, and I’ve never quite seen it work. This is the first time I’ve picked one up and said, “This is interesting” and really it was because the script wasn’t about Koreatown. It just took place in Koreatown and was about other things. What I find very interesting about this character that I played was that he was an Asian American that was starting to fetishize being Asian American, which I think is an interesting thing, and I’ve seen it happen.”

Read the full interview in Hyphen’s forthcoming April issue.


This blog entry is graciously sponsored by Toyota Matrix, check out
their website devoted to the best in Asian American film.


align="left" hspace="6" alt="Toyota Matrix" />

Contributor: 

Sylvie Kim

contributing editor & blogger

Sylvie Kim is a contributing editor at Hyphen. She previously served as Hyphen's blog coeditor with erin Khue Ninh, film editor, and blog columnist.

She writes about gender, race, class and privilege in pop culture and media (fun fun fun!) at www.sylvie-kim.com and at SF Weekly's The Exhibitionist blog. Her work has also appeared on Racialicious and Salon.