For more information, call: JULY 29, 1997 Quentin Lee (213) 382-8022 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE decominc@aol.com SHOPPING FOR FANGS UCLA Film Students Quentin Lee and Justin Lin's GenerAsian-X Indie Feature Film Debut Will Screen at Toronto International Film Festival LOS ANGELES: Quentin Lee and Justin Lin's darkly satiric film, Shopping For Fangs, a Canadian-US independent feature has just been selected to screen at this year's Toronto International Film Festival. Following Toronto, Fangs will be screened as part of the NAATA (National Asian American Telecommunications Association) sidebar at this year's Independent Feature Film Market in New York A first feature directed by Quentin Lee and Justin Lin, Shopping For Fangs is a "GenerAsian-X" psychological thriller about the criss-crossing misadventures of a young man turning into a werewolf and an eccentric waitress hotly pursuing a lonely housewife. Beyond its off-beat premise, Producer Quentin Lee describes it as "a metaphor and oblique vision by and about young Asians in North America-more broadly-this 20-something generation-our generation." Quentin Lee and Justin Lin are graduate students at UCLA's prestigious film school. They met at school and collaborated on a short Fall 1990, winning the Spotlight Award at UCLA. Born and raised in Hong Kong, 26-year-old Quentin Lee is a Hong Kong/Canadian transplant presently based in Los Angeles and Montreal. 25-year-old Justin Lin is a Taiwanese transplant to Buena Park (Orange County) since he was a boy. Impressed by Quentin's first film Flow (a feature complilation of his UCLA student shorts) at the Vancouver International Film Festival 95, Camelia Frieberg, producer of Atom Egoyan's Cannes hit The Sweet Hereafter, and video artist Richard Fung recommended Fangs for a film production grant at Canada Council. With the initial funding from Canada Council, Quentin Lee and Justin Lin began shooting Shopping For Fangs during their summer break last year entirely outside UCLA's support. Lensed in the Los Angeles and San Gabriel Valley, Fangs was made with an ensemble cast of newcomers, and a small crew of passionate film students and young professionals. Following a successful world premiere at the San Francisco International Asian American Film Festival this year, Shopping For Fangs was invited to screen at the Toronto International Film Festival. "We're exhilirated because about a year ago we were just film students with a couple of shorts, and now we have a feature in Toronto," says Justin. "We're also very level-headed about our film; it's really a new kind of Asian American film with an uncharted market," says Quentin. "We want to target the young hip 18-30 audience, which is quite different from that of Joy Luck Club and the older crop." Besides getting Fangs around film festivals, Quentin has started Margin Films, a distribution company that markets independent films with an edgy, queer and Asian/American perspective. Later this year, Margin Films will release Bugis Street, an off-beat drama from Singapore about the coming of age of a young girl (Hiep Thi Le from Oliver Stone's Heaven and Earth) in a brothel of transsexuals and transvestites, and 4 Faces of Eve, a feminist experimental comedy from Hong Kong best described as "MTV on Acid." ### FOR MORE INFORMATION & INTERVIEWS: U.S. Press Contact before Toronto Quentin Lee Margin Films 213 382-8022 Press Contact at Toronto Martin Waxman Martin Waxman & Company 416 504-2198 Valerie Wint / Gabrielle Free Toronto International Film Festival 416-967-7371