Skip to main content
Dìdi (弟弟) backdrop
Dìdi (弟弟) poster

Dìdi (弟弟)

“For anyone who's ever been a teenager.”

7.2
2024
1h 34m
ComedyDrama
Director: Sean Wang

Overview

In 2008, during the last month of summer before high school begins, an impressionable 13-year-old Taiwanese American boy learns what his family can't teach him: how to skate, how to flirt, and how to love your mom.

Trailer

Official Trailer Official

Cast

Reviews

AI-generated review
The Architecture of Shame

The "coming-of-age" film is a genre in danger of suffocating under its own conventions. We know the beats: the first crush, the betrayal of a best friend, the screaming match with a parent, the tearful reconciliation. It is a rhythm so familiar it often feels like a product rather than a portrait. Yet, in *Dìdi (弟弟)*, writer-director Sean Wang manages to electrify these tired tropes by grounding them in a specific, suffocating reality: Fremont, California, in the summer of 2008. Wang’s debut feature is not merely a nostalgia trip for millennials who remember the screech of dial-up; it is a forensic examination of how the early internet taught a generation to hide.

The film follows Chris Wang (a revelation in Izaac Wang), a 13-year-old Taiwanese American boy navigating the treacherous weeks before high school. To his family, he is "Dìdi" (little brother)—a nuisance, a baby, a disappointment. To his friends, he is "Wang Wang"—a mascot, a punchline. Desperate to carve out an identity that commands respect, Chris retreats into the glowing safety of his computer screen.

Wang’s visual language is striking because it treats the digital interface as a physical landscape. The film doesn’t just show us AIM chat windows or MySpace "Top 8" rankings; it forces us to inhabit the terrifying pauses between messages. We watch the blinking cursor with the same anxiety Chris feels, understanding that in 2008, a "status update" was a desperate plea for validation. The grainy, handheld aesthetic of Chris’s skateboarding videos—shot on MiniDV tapes—serves as a counterpoint to the polished cinematography of his home life. These low-res pixels are the only place where Chris feels he has control, a blurry kingdom where he can edit out his failures.

However, the film’s true power lies not in its digital texture, but in its analog heart. At the center of the narrative is the fracturing relationship between Chris and his mother, Chungsing, played by the legendary Joan Chen. Chen delivers a performance of shattering vulnerability. She is an artist whose dreams have been slowly eroded by the demands of immigrant motherhood and the biting criticism of her own mother-in-law (played by the director’s real grandmother, Chang Li Hua).

There is a scene that serves as the film’s emotional anchor: Chris, stinging from a rejection by a girl who tells him he is "cute for an Asian," lashes out at his mother with a cruelty that is physically painful to watch. He weaponizes his assimilation, mocking her accent and her sacrifices. It is a moment of pure, distilled shame—the shame of being "other," projected onto the one person who loves him unconditionally. Wang does not flinch from showing us Chris’s ugliness, understanding that to sanitize adolescence is to lie about it.

Unlike many films in this genre that rush toward a neat resolution, *Dìdi* earns its peace. The climax is not a grand speech, but a quiet surrender. The final moments, where mother and son sit in a silence that is no longer hostile but shared, suggest that growing up is largely about learning to forgive your parents for being human.

Sean Wang has crafted a film that feels less like a movie and more like a retrieved memory—jagged, embarrassing, and deeply tender. *Dìdi* asserts that while the technology of our youth may become obsolete, the ache of wanting to be seen remains permanent.

Clips (8)

Chris and Madi's First Date

For Anyone Who’s Ever Been A Teenager

"How to Kiss Like a Pro" Official Clip

"Don't Show Your ABC" Official Clip [Subtitled]

"I'm Chris' Mother" Official Clip

"You're Too Dramatic" Official Clip [Subtitled]

"You're Pretty Cute" Official Clip

"Don't Go To College So Far" Official Clip

Featurettes (10)

DÌDI wins BEST FIRST FEATURE at the 2025 Film Independent Spirit Awards

SEAN WANG wins BEST FIRST SCREENPLAY at the 2025 Film Independent Spirit Awards

Sean Wang on his film DÌDI

Q&A with Sean Wang (Dìdi)

Dìdi's Sean Wang & Issac Wang Throw Back to What Made Working on Set Special

Dìdi's Sean Wang on Capturing the 2000s in Film

Director Sean Wang

'DÌDI' with Joan Chen, Izaac Wang, and Sean Wang

Sean Wang on Dìdi

Meet the Artist 2024: Sean Wang on "Dìdi (弟弟)"

Behind the Scenes (2)

The Making of Dìdi

More Than A Mother

LN
Latest Netflix

Discover the latest movies and series available on Netflix. Updated daily with trending content.

About

  • AI Policy
  • This is a fan-made discovery platform.
  • Netflix is a registered trademark of Netflix, Inc.

© 2026 Latest Netflix. All rights reserved.