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Fresh from its acclaimed premiere in the Directors’ Fortnight at the Cannes Film Festival, where it was hailed as a “gripping and moving portrait of resilience” (Variety), Lucky Lu marks the stunning feature debut of Korean-Canadian filmmaker Lloyd Lee Choi. Executive produced by Forest Whitaker, this deeply humane New York story has already earned comparisons to Italian neorealism classics while carving its own contemporary path.Anchored by a remarkable performance from Chang Chen (Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon), the film follows Lu, a Chinese immigrant delivery rider working tirelessly to build a stable life for his wife (Fala Chen, Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings) and daughter (newcomer Carabelle Manna Wei). Just as his family is preparing to join him in New York, his e-bike, the sole tool of his livelihood, is stolen. That single loss sets off a downward spiral: Lu faces mounting obstacles, in an unforgiving city that seems determined to break him down. Yet he continues to fight for dignity, determined to welcome his loved ones with something resembling security. Choi’s storytelling, rooted in his award-winning short Same Old, favors quiet observation over melodrama, allowing small gestures and fleeting expressions to carry immense weight.Cinematographer Norm Li (Blue Sun Palace) captures New York’s harsh beauty in lived-in textures, alleyways, bodegas, and cramped apartments rendered with striking authenticity. The evocative score, layered with contemporary Asian-American soundscapes and the hum of Chinatown’s streets, adds rhythm and resilience to Lu’s world. At once intimate and universal, Lucky Lu refuses to romanticize the immigrant struggle, yet pulses with empathy and grace, asking what it truly means to be “lucky” in a city of endless contradictions.Nicole Guillemet