STORY

22-year-old Jade, the daughter of 2nd generation Chinese immigrants has been obedient to her mother her whole life, that is until her mother finds out that she’s pregnant. After Jade’s mother asks her to get an abortion, Jade runs away from home to protect her baby. Jade finds herself a cheap apartment and a job in a restaurant which doesn’t last long. She gets fired from the restaurant but the manager changes her mind after she witnesses Jade hiding from her mother in the restaurant kitchen. Inspired by the manager, Jade is emboldened to go home and face her mom, as well as her deepest fear and desire for life.

DIRECTOR’S STATEMENT

I grew up in a very conventional Asian family, where emotions are repressed and feelings are never talked about. The relationships between me and my parents are distanced and intimidating. Nevertheless I never doubt the love my parents have for me. It’s a weirdly cohesive balance.
In the process of writing JADE, the plot came out intuitively, but I had a hard time digging into the deepest desire in Jade, the reasons why she insists on having the baby. Then I remembered when I was a child, I always imagined having my own happy family — that desire obviously came from the dissatisfaction for my primary family. I slowly realized what Jade wants as a mother, is actually reflecting what she wants as a daughter. Becoming a mother is a transformation for Jade to be stronger and face her fear and desire.
Jade is the miniature of all the people who share this kind of parent-child relationships — wanting to be independent, wanting to prove that they’re more than who their parents want them to be. JADE made me realized being strong doesn’t mean running away from your primary family — but to have the courage of facing, fixing and communicating.

AWARDS

TEAM

WRITER, DIRECTOR, PRODUCER, EDITOR | Peggy Tserwen Tseng

Peggy Tserwen Tseng is a Taiwanese filmmaker in New York City. She is now pursuing her master degree in Film at Stony Brook University (Killer Films).

Her work delves into the identity struggle between Eastern and Western cultures and the exploration of cultural and gender issues shared across generations.

Her team won the 1st place in 2019-20 SUNY PACC Prize for Performing Arts, Creation, and Curation in 2019 with a 10K grant. She also won the 2nd place in National Taiwan University Short Film Competition with her short “Humanoid”.

DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY | Charles Desjardin

Charlie DesJardin is a filmmaker and professional freelancer. He offers Director of Photography work for independent films and media industries, such as Sotheby's Art House in NY and Time Warner Cable. Charlie has BFA in Film/Video, and is also in the process of getting his MFA in Film. Charlie has also won best cinematography in 2015 in the NY 48 hour film project. Charlie is also working on his own independent work.

STILLS