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Come See the Paradise

  • 1990
  • R
  • 2h 18m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
3.3K
YOUR RATING
Dennis Quaid and Tamlyn Tomita in Come See the Paradise (1990)
Home Video Trailer from 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Play trailer0:31
1 Video
36 Photos
DramaRomanceWar

The passionate romance between an Irish-American man and a Japanese-American woman is threatened when the Pearl Harbor attacks happen and the woman is forced into a prison camp because of he... Read allThe passionate romance between an Irish-American man and a Japanese-American woman is threatened when the Pearl Harbor attacks happen and the woman is forced into a prison camp because of her ethnicity.The passionate romance between an Irish-American man and a Japanese-American woman is threatened when the Pearl Harbor attacks happen and the woman is forced into a prison camp because of her ethnicity.

  • Director
    • Alan Parker
  • Writer
    • Alan Parker
  • Stars
    • Dennis Quaid
    • Tamlyn Tomita
    • Sab Shimono
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    3.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Alan Parker
    • Writer
      • Alan Parker
    • Stars
      • Dennis Quaid
      • Tamlyn Tomita
      • Sab Shimono
    • 45User reviews
    • 9Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Come See The Paradise
    Trailer 0:31
    Come See The Paradise

    Photos36

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    Top Cast93

    Edit
    Dennis Quaid
    Dennis Quaid
    • Jack McGurn
    Tamlyn Tomita
    Tamlyn Tomita
    • Lily Yuriko Kawamura…
    Sab Shimono
    Sab Shimono
    • Hiroshi Kawamura
    Shizuko Hoshi
    Shizuko Hoshi
    • Mrs. Kawamura
    Stan Egi
    Stan Egi
    • Charlie Kawamura
    Ronald Yamamoto
    • Harry Kawamura
    Akemi Nishino
    • Dulcie Kawamura
    Naomi Nakano
    • Joyce Kawamura
    Brady Tsurutani
    • Frankie Kawamura
    Elizabeth Gilliam
    • Younger Mini McGann
    Shyree Mezick
    Shyree Mezick
    • Middle Mini McGann
    Caroline Junko King
    Caroline Junko King
    • Older Mini McGann
    Pruitt Taylor Vince
    Pruitt Taylor Vince
    • Augie Farrell
    Colm Meaney
    Colm Meaney
    • Gerry McGurn
    Becky Ann Baker
    Becky Ann Baker
    • Marge McGurn
    John Finnegan
    John Finnegan
    • Brennan
    Takamuro Ikeguchi
    • Mr. Fujiuka
    Danny Kamekona
    Danny Kamekona
    • Mr. Nishikawa
    • Director
      • Alan Parker
    • Writer
      • Alan Parker
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews45

    6.73.2K
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    Featured reviews

    6SnoopyStyle

    romance in difficult history

    It's 1936. Jack McGurn (Dennis Quaid)'s wife had gone back to Ireland after losing their unborn child in an industrial accident. He is an union "sweatshop lawyer" who gets run out of Brooklyn after he disagreed with burning down a theater. He comes to join his brother Gerry in L.A. and eventually gets a job at a Japanese theater in Little Tokyo. He falls in love with the owner's daughter Lily Kawamura (Tamlyn Tomita). Her father forbids her and she runs away to get married in Seattle. It was illegal in California at the time. He gets into trouble trying to organize the cannery plant that he works at despite her objections. She goes back to her parents right when Japanese forces attack Pearl Habor. The police arrests all the first generation men. Jack rejoins his family in L.A. The family is interned and Jack is drafted.

    The movie moves deliberately. It takes its time to show the cultural differences and give the romance some space. It's a bit slow but it works as an old fashion romantic film. It doesn't really heighten the drama more than a simple melodrama level. The running time is over two hours long and probably would work better with less. This starts as a fine love story about Jack and Lily but that drama fades into the background in the second half. The camp part of the movie becomes more about telling different aspects of life through the family members.
    10carameljunky

    Great movie about Asian American culture!

    I really loved this movie. It was informational and had a beautiful storyline. I generally don't get my knowledge from movies because they are often very inaccurate but I know this one is based on facts as I have done some research about internment camps for a class paper. I know that the story between Jack and lily is entirely made up, but all the historical events aren't. Also, I feel that movie directors and studios should make more movies with Asian characters and about Asian in America because I find it very interesting. I am not Asian, not one little bit and I am getting tired of seeing always the same kind of people on movie screens. I know that the studios have come a long way but they need to make more movies like this one, and believe that there is an audience (not obviously Asian) interested in seeing them. If you have not seen this movie, get some popcorn, unplug the phone and enjoy.
    5vanillabean349

    It could be worse I guess

    While I can't say I whole-heartedly hated this movie, I can't say I loved it either. In some ways, it attempts to make a difficult part of history more palatable for an American audience, and for this, I believe it deserves some commendation. However, to a large extent, the plotline of the film overshadows the historical events that it attempts to incorporate, and possibly even trivializes the hardships endured by people of Japanese descent during the 1930s and 1940s.

    The movie itself is centered around a cliché, star-crossed love story, leaving the majority of the historical features of the film as bits and pieces that are seemingly tacked on to give the film its validity. More than half of the film is spent on (albeit, poor) character development and introduction of the main conflict. As a result, the parts of the film that deal with internment and other injustices faced by people of Japanese descent are framed inherently as secondary aspects of the story. Internment and relocation were used as plot devices. Tense racial and/or ethnic conditions within camps and society are played down to make Jack and Lily's love more plausible. In many cases, Nisei and Issei were faced with systemic and often violent anti-Japanese sentiments that posed threats to personal wellbeing. In the camps, conditions were unsanitary and, due to the material losses some people suffered when forced to leave their houses so quickly during the relocation process, many internees were not able to afford appropriate medical care. This aspect is largely glossed over in the movie depiction.

    While I can go on about the issues I have with this film, I do believe it does a decent job of highlighting some of the important aspects of this period of history. Through the plot, Parker addresses the paradox of citizenship and loyalty, as well as other injustices and racism faced by the Japanese community during the 1930s and 1940s. Before World War II, people of Japanese descent were prevented from receiving citizenship by US immigration policies, but during internment, these people were also asked to swear loyalty to the United States, effectively challenging their identity as either Japanese or American. Similarly, there is some mention of the racism experienced by Nisei and Issei during this time, but it is often more generalized and even misguidedly incorporated into the screenwriting itself.

    Come See the Paradise walks the fine line between being historically valuable, and unfortunately frustrating to watch. What it lacks in historical accuracy, it makes up for in typical, sappy, Hollywood romance. This film could not be confused with a documentary, but for those seeking an interesting movie to watch, this is a decent choice if taken with a grain of salt.
    6angelcasillas-41130

    Unnecessary parts to the plot

    This movie tells a story that often many Americans do not recall. When we think of camps, we usually think about how Americans were heroes who liberated Nazi camps during the second World War. However, this story lets you observe the many aspects of Japanese internment and how many American citizens were imprisoned by the way that they looked rather than for having committed a crime.

    I find the first half an hour or so unnecessary. You are introduced to a Japanese family and their business, and Dennis Quaid's character. His character is actually pretty unnecessary in the movie. He does not really contribute anything to the plot besides being married to a japanese girl. Of course, this was rather odd at the time since the Japanese were considered the enemy, but that is pretty much it in my opinion. The movie could have retold the exact same story and saved us about 45 minutes in telling us about Japanese internment without the use of his character. THis is not to say the movie is bad, but it is pretty long for no reason other than to include an american that you are supposed to be inclined into liking.
    6Quinoa1984

    not bad melodrama, good performances, decent substance

    Of all places, I remember seeing this film in an English class in senior year of High School (something to do with civil rights, not really to do with the quality of writing per-say), to give all the sides to the problems of equality in the American experience. Come See the Paradise does chronicle a crucial blunder during the second world war- the kind of lesson to be learned from it that does need to be learned in regards to the present- though I could imagine a better film being made at some point on the subject. This is the big chunk of it, anyway, the one that would get spoken of if passed along to someone as a one-line note. But there's also a romantic plot to it, relating the experience so that it's personal and not just an abstract form of a nightmarish reality.

    Dennis Quaid and Tamlyn Tomita play the romantic interest of the picture, Quaid playing a regular Joe who comes to work at a movie theater in Little Tokyo, meets the boss's daughter played by Tomita, and soon they fall for each other quite deeply. But as it's forbidden by the girl's father, they still try and sneak away anyway to have their love. Then come the internment camps, the camps created as a homegrown quasi concentration camp for the Japanese, where in Lily is once again with her family, away from her great love. It isn't exactly the most sunny of entertainments, and Alan Parker's writing is nowhere near the level of finesse and maturity his direction has, but there could be a lot worse as far as bludgeoning-over-the-head movie-making. I can also see, from my recollection, that it is understandably one of the least seen of Parker's films.

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    Drama
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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Publicity for this picture stated: "During the World War II over 110,000 Japanese Americans, mostly American citizens, were interned in concentration camps in the United States, unconstitutionally, without trial, [and] for no reason other than their racial ancestry".
    • Goofs
      During the destroying Japanese businesses scene, the "I am an American" sign is printed as if from a professional printers, however, it's entirely possible that people had signs professionally printed.
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      Older Mini McGann: Why are we so early?

      Lily Yuriko Kawamura: It's good to be early.

      Older Mini McGann: Do you ever worry that you won't recognize him, Mama?

      Lily Yuriko Kawamura: You recognize me, don't you?

      Older Mini McGann: Well, he might have grown a beard or a moustache or something. And I was so little. I only think I remember him. Do you think he'll remember me?

      Lily Yuriko Kawamura: Well, he has all your photographs and all the letters you wrote him, and he has all your school reports

      Older Mini McGann: You sent him my school reports?

      Lily Yuriko Kawamura: Of course I did. I wanted to let him know how well you were doing. Come on, now. I got some tea and rice cakes here. We'll have a nice talk while we're walking, okay? Let's go.

      Older Mini McGann: How far do we have to walk?

      Lily Yuriko Kawamura: Not far.

      Older Mini McGann: If we have so much time, then why are you walking so fast? I shouldn't have worn these new shoes. I think I have a blister. Mama!

      [speaks in Japanese]

      Lily Yuriko Kawamura: [replies in Japanese] Try not to think about it. You want to look pretty, don't you?

      Older Mini McGann: Can we talk about Papa?

      Lily Yuriko Kawamura: Okay.

    • Crazy credits
      The 20th Century Fox logo does not have the fanfare on it.
    • Connections
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: The Godfather Part III/Kindergarten Cop/The Bonfire of the Vanities/The Russia House (1990)
    • Soundtracks
      Kawamura Family Theme
      Written by Jake Parker and Alan Parker

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 1991 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • Japanese
    • Also known as
      • Komm und sieh das Paradies
    • Filming locations
      • Portland, Oregon, USA
    • Production company
      • Twentieth Century Fox
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $17,500,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $947,306
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $65,532
      • Dec 25, 1990
    • Gross worldwide
      • $947,306
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 18m(138 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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