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Ke Huy Quan Becomes Leading-Man in Comedy Thriller
By H Y Nahm | 17 Feb, 2025

Love Hurts may have been panned by critics but gives the former child actor a showcase for his leading-man potential.

It's a tale as old as time, at least in the world of comedic action-thrillers.

Boy (Ke Huy Quan) was an ultra-deadly assassin assigned to kill Girl (Ariana Dubose) but fell in love instead and spared her, angering his ruthless crime boss brother (Daniel Wu).  Boy and Girl go into separate hiding, with Boy finding contentment as a milquetoast Milwaukee realtor.  

As action fans know this merely sets the stage for the inevitable, over-the-top payback mayhem.  That may be the most satisfying aspect of Love Hurts.  The contrived plot disappoints by leaning too much on the greatly overused deus-ex-machina of "the Russian mob" (what about those neglected Polish, Chinese or Mexican mobs?).  The audience would have preferred to watch Boy and Girl handle the baddies all by themselves on the way to finding love and happiness.

From the standpoint of Quan's prospects as a leading man, the movie adds the essential ingredient of a badass edge to the sensitive side brilliantly established by his Oscar-winning (as well as Golden Globe-winning) supporting performance in Everything Everywhere All at Once.  That may be why Quan is now slated to star in Fairytale in New York, an action-thriller for 2026 release.  

That edgy vibe is also being tapped to the max in Bad Boy in which Quan plays a serial killer opposite prospective victim Lili Reinhart in a horror film told from the perspective of his dog.  Also upcoming for Quan are supporting roles in a couple of movies in post-production: The Electric State (starring Chris Pratt and Millie Bobby Brown) and Zootopia 2 (starring Ginnifer Goodwin and Jason Bateman).

That's quite a slate for the Vietnam-born actor who gave up on Hollywood in 2001 due to lack of meaningful non-offensive roles for Asian male actors.  

Barely five years after his refugee family was admitted into the US Quan was cast as Short Round in Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.  The role earned him one of six nominations for the 1984 Saturn Award for Best Performance by a Younger Actor.  That was followed by a co-starring role as Data in The Goonies (1985), then a string of roles in movies and TV series in both the US and Asia.

During Quan's two decade hiatus from acting he went to USC Film School, edited a horror film, and worked as a stunt coordinator in various productions in the US and Asia.  It wasn't until 2018, with the surprise success of Crazy Rich Asians, that Quan felt inspired to return to acting with a small supporting role in Finding Ohana, a family adventure set in rural Oahu.