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How A24’s After Yang Depicts the Film’s Futuristic Asian Culture Through Fashion

After Yang expands the typical A.I. question of “what it means to be human” to ask: What does it mean to be Asian?

Image may contain Colin Farrell Jodie TurnerSmith Human Person Clothing Apparel People and Kim Namgil

Colin Farrell, Jodie Turner-Smith, Malea Emma Tjandrawidjaja and Justin H. Min in After Yang.Courtesy of A24

After Yang is a futuristic science fiction film in which there aren’t any stunts, space travel, or spandex. In fact, it’s so lacking in conventional sci-fi signifiers that you may not immediately notice it’s set in the future at all—and that’s exactly what costume designer Arjun Bhasin and writer/director Kogonada intended.

In crafting the A24 film’s vision of the future (the year and locale of which are unspecified) the objective was not so much the invention of a new frontier, but the hopeful speculation of “a return,” as Bhasin relays over a Zoom call. “The intention was to create a modern world that felt like it borrowed from ancient traditions.” Bhasin’s costume design, which prominently references Asian fashion in its mixture of modern designer fare and traditional cultural garments, is central to After Yang’s vision of a globalized civilization that is both reverent of the past and severed from it, grasping at its fraying edges.

Adapted from Alexander Weinstein’s short story “Saying Goodbye to Yang,” the film follows Jake (Colin Farrell) and his wife Kyra (Jodie Turner-Smith) as they raise their adopted Chinese daughter Mika (Malea Emma Tjandrawidjaja) with the help of Yang (Justin H. Min), an artificially-intelligent “technosapien” android designed to teach Mika about her heritage. After Yang succumbs to mechanical failure, Jake’s mission to get him repaired gives way to new understanding of Yang’s inner world, which proves revelatory for the entire family. Following up Kogonada’s 2017 feature debut Columbus, After Yang is a meditation on memory, alienation, and cultural identity.

Instead of a stereotypically slick, minimalistic sci-fi aesthetic — monochromatic palettes, form-fitting fabrics, impenetrable textures — Bhasin’s costume design favors breezy, layered silhouettes of cotton and linen in earthy shades of turmeric, indigo, and brick. “We were all excited about doing science fiction, but not really hitting it in the way that it’s been seen before, where everything is shiny and metallic and modern,” Bhasin says. “We wanted it to be tactile, warm, friendly, and inviting.” The costuming and biophilic production design—airy interiors with bountiful greenery, even inside of cars—were based on parameters Kogonada and co. established early on for their futuristic society. The first was that humanity had reached a reconciliatory relationship with nature after being “humbled” by environmental catastrophe. “The second thing was this idea of globalization,” Bhasin says. “That the world was not countries, [but] an open world where everything flowed into everything else.”

Justin H. Min and Haley Lu Richardson in After Yang. Courtesy of Linda Kallerus via A24/Everett Collection

That borderlessness is apparent in the family’s wardrobe, which features traditional designs from a variety of world cultures—predominantly Asian ones. Jake’s and Kyra’s outfits incorporate motifs like obi belts and Mandarin collars, as well as pieces like kimonos, kurtas, longyis, and sarongs. At one point, Kyra wears a Japanese yukata-esque outfit made from African mudcloth. As stunning as Farrell and Turner-Smith look in the clothes, the aesthetic underscores their characters’ struggle to foster a meaningful connection to Mika’s cultural heritage. The couple can enjoy the trappings of pan-Asian culture—through clothes, food, and Jake’s studious obsession with tea—but cannot impart an understanding of Chinese identity to Mika, who wears qipao tops and lovingly refers to Yang as her “gege,” but questions where she fits into her family and the world. Yang is ostensibly Chinese based on his phenotype, traditional garb, and database of historical Chinese fun facts built into his OS, but he too wonders what those signifiers ultimately amount to. (Is ethnicity a matter of programming?)

If every sci-fi film about A.I. is predicated on the question of what it means to be human, After Yang complexifies that inquiry to ask: what does it mean to be Asian? The film injects fresh perspective and nuance into a genre known for its long, troubling history of Orientalism. Kogonada, a Korean-American who uses a Japanese moniker, uses Yang as a conduit for some of his personal anxieties. “My own struggle with my Asian identity often is in the world of its construction: Do I perceive myself as Asian, not Asian enough, too Asian? There’s no solid ground for that identity, especially if you’ve been dislocated, so we have to contend with the way that Asia and Asians have been presented [in media],” the director has said. The film invites us to consider what shapes our understanding of cultural identity.

“The discussions of culture in the film were interesting to Kogonada and to me, as a person of Indian descent living in the U.S.,” Bhasin says. “All these things that were very personal to us found a place in the film and are what the film is ultimately about.” In sourcing designer pieces to flesh out the characters’ wardrobes, Bhasin happened to select labels that also have transcultural origins, including Korean-German designer Siki Im, Chinese-American designer Phillip Lim, and Jan-Jan Van Essche, a Belgian designer known for Japanese-inspired menswear. Bhasin mixed the high-end garments with nondescript textiles and borrowed pieces from friends’ closets to achieve what felt supportive to each character’s story. “There has been a move in modern science fiction to make everyone dress the same, and they’re just part of a machine,” Bhasin says. “We wanted to feel like everyone was individual, everyone made choices, and everyone felt the way they felt about clothing.”

Colin Farrell and Jodie Turner-Smith in After Yang.Courtesy of Michael Oneal via A24/Everett Collection

Bhasin’s personalized approach is indicative of the broader intentionality that prevents After Yang’s bountiful style from eclipsing its substance. With Bhasin’s help, Kogonada’s lush world is replete with thoughtful details. Apiece as deceptively simple as a t-shirt for a fictional band called The Lily Chou-Chou is a loaded reference that also reveals Yang’s youthful spirit. Meanwhile, a brief shot in which the light bounces off Kyra’s silk top signifies a “reflective” moment for her character towards the film’s conclusion.

Elsewhere, the costuming is foregrounded in the action. Take the whimsical opening credits sequence, where the full slate of characters, each in formation with their family, performs a choreographed dance routine in iridescent, elasticated jumpsuits and matching jackets. An automated voiceover helps us glean that these families and thousands of others are synchronous competitors in a monthly, remotely-conducted dance-off, where their seemingly unsophisticated outfits interact with movement-tracking technology. “[The idea was] they start doing this dance contest and receive these outfits in the mail. We wanted something that felt sci-fi, but also felt kind of bad, like Amazon Prime costumes,” Bhasin explains. ” Though the contest is non-essential to the plot, it’s a clever bit of world-building by Bhasin and Kogonada that invites us into the film.

Wearable technology plays a more pivotal role later in the film, when Jake dons a pair of VR glasses that allow him to play back Yang’s stored memories. Seeing the world through Yang’s eyes is a radical perspective shift that demystifies Yang to Jake and exemplifies the emotionally rich interior life that Asian characters are so often denied. With guidance from Kogonada and DP Benjamin Loeb, Bhasin was careful that the design of the glasses wouldn’t undercut the poignancy of the scene, ultimately choosing a delicate pair of hexagonal frames from Mykita. “They wanted the technology to be hidden, [so] that it wasn’t flashy,” he says. “We pulled a bunch of different glasses to see what was stylish but also kind of disappeared. We wanted it to be the simplest form of what it was.”

Simplicity may ultimately be the film’s greatest strength. The most resonant sci-fi endures not because it successfully predicts the future, but because it telegraphs something timeless about human existence. For all its imagination and flair, After Yang’s futuristic world is designed for us to recognize ourselves in it.

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