Private Project

CHECK PLEASE

Two headstrong Koreans can't agree on who's treating who to dinner, causing their casual restaurant outing to spiral into a martial arts deathmatch.

  • Shane Chung
    Director
  • Shane Chung
    Writer
  • Anna Castagnaro
    Producer
    WHEN TIME STOPS
  • Nick Leahy
    Producer
    LIVE FROM THE GENEVA
  • Richard Yan
    Key Cast
    "Jay"
    IDOL
  • Sukwon Jeong
    Key Cast
    "Su-bin"
    APART
  • Project Type:
    Short, Student
  • Genres:
    action, action comedy, martial arts, kung fu, aapi, comedy, student
  • Runtime:
    9 minutes 38 seconds
  • Completion Date:
    July 2, 2024
  • Production Budget:
    7,500 USD
  • Country of Origin:
    United States
  • Country of Filming:
    United States
  • Language:
    English
  • Shooting Format:
    Digital
  • Aspect Ratio:
    1.90∶1
  • Film Color:
    Color
  • First-time Filmmaker:
    Yes
  • Student Project:
    Yes - Northwestern University
  • Digital Cinema Package:
    Unavailable
  • Fantastic Fest
    Austin, TX
    United States
    September 19, 2024
    Official Selection
  • Silicon Valley Asia Pacific Film Festival
    Sunnyvale, CA
    United States
    October 20, 2024
    Best Short: Audience Award
  • San Diego Asian Film Festival
    San Diego
    United States
    November 10, 2024
    Official Selection
  • St. Louis International Film Festival
    St. Louis
    United States
    November 11, 2024
    Official Selection
  • BFI Future Film Festival
    London
    United Kingdom
    February 20, 2025
    Best Director
  • Lake Michigan Film Festival
    Okemos
    United States
    March 1, 2025
  • Big Shoulders International Student Film Festival
    Chicago
    United States
    March 8, 2025
    Best Editing & Audience Award
  • Minneapolis / St. Paul International Film Festival
    Minneapolis
    United States
    April 7, 2025
    Official Selection
  • CineYouth
    Chicago
    United States
    April 27, 2025
    Best Comedy
  • Los Angeles Asia Pacific Film Festival
    Los Angeles
    United States
    May 4, 2025
    Los Angeles Premiere
    Official Selection
  • CAAMFest
    San Fransisco
    United States
    May 10, 2025
    Official Selection
  • Chattanooga Film Festival
    Chattanooga, TN
    United States
    June 21, 2025
    Best Student Film & Audience Award (Short Film)
  • Palm Springs International Shortfest
    Palm Springs, CA
    United States
    June 27, 2025
    Official Selection
  • Fantasia Film Festival
    Montreal, Quebec
    Canada
    July 19, 2025
    Canadian Premiere
    Bronze Audience Award - Best International Short Film
Director Biography - Shane Chung

SHANE CHUNG is a Korean-American filmmaker who enjoys challenging mainstream narratives around Asians and Trojan-Horsing thorny emotions and complex topics into genre films.

His latest short is the martial arts comedy 'CHECK PLEASE', which is one part a tribute to '90s Hong Kong action flicks and one part a bighearted reflection on the “in-betweenness” of holding an Asian-American identity. The short has screened at Fantastic Fest 2024, Palm Springs International Shortsfest 2025, the Chicago International Film Festival 2025, and won a 'Best Director' prize at the BFI Future Film Festival 2025.

He is currently developing 'CHECK PLEASE' into a feature.

Add Director Biography
Director Statement

CHECK PLEASE is heavily influenced by schlocky, zany, stunt-filled action comedy and martial arts films (Jackie Chan, Stephen Chow) because first and foremost I wanted to make a crowdpleaser. I think the best movies are like magic tricks in that you walk away after seeing them asking “how did they do that?!”

And yet I also wanted to use the "fun" of the action genre to trick the audience into sitting with a movie that talks about a theme more personal to me: the "in-betweenness" of holding a Korean-American identity. I address a few questions about belonging and representation: what is “Koreanness”? Is it innate? Can you gain or lose it? (Jay attempts to reclaim his perceived “loss in Koreanness” by attaching himself to superficial cultural Korean rituals, like picking up the bill.) And is there such thing as a “bad Korean” on screen? I wanted to portray Asian Americans in film that go beyond a tired immigrant storyline or a discrimination storyline and instead focus on the relatable internal struggle of being too Korean for America, but being too American for Korea. This is a resonant theme for many, my hope is that this film can help them feel that they aren't alone!