Year: 1993
Runtime: 108 mins
Language: Chinese
Budget: $1M
A Taiwanese‑American man lives contentedly in New York with his American boyfriend, but his traditional Chinese parents pressure him to marry. To keep them appeased and help a Chinese woman obtain a green card, he stages a marriage of convenience. When his parents fly in for the wedding, the ruse unravels, sparking comic chaos and cultural clashes.
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Read the complete plot breakdown of The Wedding Banquet (1993), including all key story events, major twists, and the ending explained in detail. Discover what really happened—and what it all means.
Gao Wai-Tung [Winston Chao] is a gay Taiwanese immigrant living in Manhattan with his partner [Mitchell Lichtenstein]. He has not come out to his traditional-minded parents back in Taiwan, who are eagerly hoping to see him marry and start a family to carry on the family line. To buy time, Wai-Tung and [Mitchell Lichtenstein] concoct a series of impossible demands for a dating service—demands that include an opera singer who must be 5’9”, hold two PhDs, and speak five languages. To their surprise, the service does locate a 5’8” Chinese woman who meets all but one qualification, possessing only one PhD. She is gracious and understanding when Wai-Tung explains his dilemma, and she is also hiding a relationship with a white man from her own family.
At Simon’s insistence, Wai-Tung considers marrying one of his tenants, Wei-Wei [May Chin], a penniless artist from mainland China who needs a green card. Besides helping Wei-Wei, the couple hope this arrangement will placate Wai-Tung’s parents. To smooth things over, Simon is described as Wai-Tung’s landlord, and the couple hastily remove gay imagery from the home while replacing it with Mandarin calligraphy to suit their parents’ expectations. Mr. and Mrs. Gao arrive bearing gifts and US$30,000 to fund an extravagant wedding, assuming Wai-Tung has a wealthy fiancée. Wai-Tung dares not tell them the truth, partly because his father suffers from the aftereffects of a recent stroke, and partly for the sake of appearances.
The next day, Wai-Tung announces plans to marry Wei-Wei, with the ceremony to be conducted by a Justice of the Peace [Michael Gaston]. To his parents’ eyes, this will be a perfectly respectable arrangement, but the disappointment in his mother’s face during the courthouse ceremony weighs heavily on Wai-Tung. To redeem the situation, he accepts an offer of a grand wedding banquet from Mr. Gao’s former batman, now a restaurant and reception hall owner, and the family preparations spiral into a lavish celebration. After the banquet, a boisterous crowd of relatives and friends bursts into the bridal suite for an after-party and they insist that the newlyweds prove their bond by getting into bed together, naked, before they will leave. The revelry leads to Wei-Wei’s unexpected pregnancy, and Simon’s distress at the turn of events triggers a heated dispute that threatens the couple’s fragile balance and Wei-Wei’s safety.
Mr. Gao endures another stroke, and in a moment of anger after the fight, Wai-Tung finally tells his mother the truth. She is shocked and begs him not to reveal it to his father, but Mr. Gao—clever and perceptive—has already seen more than he lets on. He speaks softly with Simon, acknowledging the hidden reality of their relationship and treating Simon as part of the family, even offering him a hongbao as a formal, if reluctant, recognition. He asks Simon to keep quiet about the arrangement, arguing that without the sham marriage, there would be no grandchild to carry on the family line. Wei-Wei, navigating the moral maze of love, pregnancy, and loyalty, decides to keep the baby and asks Simon to remain with Wai-Tung and to be a father figure as well.
As the Gaos prepare to depart, Mr. Gao warmly shakes Simon’s hand, signaling a rare, hopeful accord across a world of misunderstanding. Mrs. Gao offers Wei-Wei a fond farewell, and the group boards their plane with a sense of fragile, newly formed family ties that defy conventional expectations. In the quiet moments after the departure, the ensemble must figure out how to redefine love, duty, and belonging in a landscape that has long treated their identities as secrets to be kept rather than truths to be celebrated.
Last Updated: October 09, 2025 at 11:27
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