In UK Cinemas from Friday 19th June 2026.

Tracy Choi returns with Girlfriends, a quietly disarming drama that slips under the skin with the kind of emotional honesty that Hong Kong cinema doesn’t deliver often enough these days. Choi has always had a knack for intimate storytelling, but here she sharpens her focus, crafting a film that feels both deeply personal and universally resonant.

At the heart of Girlfriends is a director who knows exactly what she wants to say. Choi’s own statement frames the film perfectly:

“This story is about how our present self is built from countless versions of our past selves. We meet all kinds of people along life’s journey. Some are just passing through, some are people we’ve hurt and some are people who have hurt us. But ultimately it’s because of these people that we become better versions of ourselves. This is the story I want to tell.”

That sentiment pulses through every frame. Girlfriends isn’t just a story about relationships it’s about the emotional archaeology of who we become, and the people who leave fingerprints on our lives whether we want them to or not.

The film’s emotional weight rests on the shoulders of Jennifer Yu and Fish Liew, and both deliver performances that feel lived‑in rather than performed. Yu brings a raw vulnerability that never tips into melodrama; she’s magnetic even in silence. Liew, meanwhile, continues her run as one of the most compelling actresses in contemporary Hong Kong cinema measured, layered, and quietly devastating.

Together, they create a dynamic that feels authentic, messy, and painfully recognisable. Their chemistry isn’t loud it’s the kind that simmers, built on glances, hesitations, and the unspoken history between two people who know each other too well.

Backing them is a supporting cast that adds texture without ever feeling like narrative filler. Elizabeth Tang brings a grounded presence, the kind of performance that anchors the emotional stakes. Han Ning adds a subtle but memorable energy, her scenes offering a different emotional rhythm that complements the leads. Natalie Hsu shines in her moments, delivering a youthful sincerity that contrasts beautifully with the film’s heavier themes. Eliz Lao rounds out the ensemble with a performance that lingers longer than expected quiet, precise, and affecting. Each actor contributes to the film’s mosaic of relationships, reinforcing Choi’s message that every person we encounter shapes us in ways we don’t always see until much later.

Stylistically, Girlfriends carries Choi’s signature softness gentle pacing, intimate framing, and a refusal to rush emotional beats. But beneath that softness is a sharp emotional truth. The film doesn’t shout; it whispers, and somehow that whisper hits harder.

Eastern Film Fans has always championed films that take risks not through spectacle, but through sincerity. Girlfriends is exactly that kind of film quietly bold, emotionally intelligent, and anchored by a cast that understands the power of restraint.

Tracy Choi has crafted a story that feels like a memory you’re not sure you’re ready to revisit, but can’t quite let go of. And maybe that’s the point.

In UK Cinemas from Friday 19th June 2026.
Girlfriends
3.9/5

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