
After Yang
The future has never looked so human.
When his young daughter's beloved companion — an android named Yang — malfunctions, Jake searches for a way to repair him. In the process, Jake discovers the life that has been passing in front of him, reconnecting with his wife and daughter across a distance he didn't know was there.
- 6.4
- 2022
- Released
- 1h 36m

Justin H. Min
Yang
Malea Emma Tjandrawidjaja
Mika
Colin Farrell
Jake
Jodie Turner-Smith
Kyra
Haley Lu Richardson
Ada
Sarita Choudhury
Cleo
Ritchie Coster
Russ
Clifton Collins Jr.
George
Orlagh Cassidy
Lillian
Ava DeMary
Vicky
Lee Wong
Wei
Brett Dier
Aaron
Eve Lindley
Faye
Adeline Kerns
Twin 1
Ansley Kerns
Twin 2
Nana Mensah
Nico
An-Li Bogan
Ling
Deborah Hedwall
Nancy
Katie Honaker
Min's Mother
Alberto Del Saz
Dancer
Jesse Kovarsky
Dancer
Marcella Lewis
Dancer
Maria Majoli
Dancer
Toni Melaas
Dancer
Mina Nishimura
Dancer
Lily Ockwell
Dancer
JC Shuster
Dancer
Megan Williams
Dancer
Taylor Ortega
Jasmine (uncredited)
Jae Kim
Adult Min (uncredited)






Released
en
$131,465.00
- #future
- #based on novel or book
- #loss of loved one
- #adoptive father
- #father
- #loss
- #futuristic
- #grief
- #memory
- #robot
- #mourning
- #adopted child
- #futuristic car
- #futuristic vehicle
- #father daughter relationship
- #self-driving car
Reviews

<em>'After Yang'</em> is a good movie, plain and simple. My only negative would be how slow paced it is, like I definitely get why it is portrayed the way it is and it has its benefits in certain moments. However, it did take me out of events onscreen here and there. That aside, it's a well made film; there's plenty to chew on in terms of what it's attempting to tell. Colin Farrell, Jodie Turne
Near future sci-fi that's a reflection not just on how our relationship with tech and AI might change, but also on how tech and AI can change our relationships with other people. Lots of dream like memory sequences with an effective soundtrack and visuals. Not bad, not great, a bit slow maybe.

I really liked what _After Yang_ was attempting to do. There was a really deep, interesting story about loss, but unfortunately the weight of the topic drowned this movie. The movie was barely 90 minutes long and it felt like eternity watching. The emotional impact was destroyed by the slow pacing. In my opinion, this movie had no business being as long as it did. There was not enough material in

When a futuristic family are doing their daily exercise regime one morning, the robotic companion for the young "Mika" (Malea Emma Tjandrawidjaja) has a bit of a freeze. Pestered by the - frankly annoying - child, mum (Jodie Turner-Smith) and dad (Colin Farrell) decide it has to be fixed, so the latter takes it to a friend of a friend after it transpires their warranty doesn't cover "core" failure
I’m unsure what After Yang tries to accomplish (does it want to be a cautionary tale about the evils of privacy-violating technology? A gentle meditation on the nature of memory? The manifesto for a hypothetical AndroidLivesMatter movement?), but I do know that whatever it is, it fails – just like Jake (Colin Farrell) and Kyra (Jodie Turner-Smith) fail to parent their little daughter Mika (Malea E
FULL SPOILER-FREE REVIEW @ https://www.msbreviews.com/movie-reviews/after-yang-spoiler-free-review-sundance-2022 "After Yang may have some pacing issues, but Kogonada's beautifully thoughtful storytelling and ASKA's unforgettable, tear-inducing score transform this piece into a contemplative, inspirational cinematic experience. A profound, sincere study of what it means to be a family, what
I found in After Yang something I had been searching for for a long time. It is particularly special to me as an Asian whose culture and sense of belonging has faded with each passing generation. My recent quest to rekindle what was once of my ancestors has been especially difficult in a climate that has so flagrantly looked down upon me. After Yang provides a sense of relief in the idea that who











