Asian Representation in Christmas Cinema
By Kelli Luu | 25 Dec, 2025
Asian actors are finally receiving the spotlight in holiday films, and these five movies prove to us that Christmas storytelling is beginning to reflect more cultures.
For many Asian Americans, Christmas movies were always something we never saw ourselves in, but now, Asian actors are finally appearing in holiday movies on some of the biggest streaming platforms.
A big turning point for us was in 2019 with Last Christmas, a romcom that completely disrupted societal expectations. Henry Golding plays Emilia Clarke’s love interest, which is something that rarely happened since Asian men were usually portrayed as side kicks or nerds. Set in London, this movie is a meaningful shift in representation, giving viewers a quiet change through a typical holiday love story.
Another Christmas romcom that centers an Asian lead is Love Hard. This Netflix movie depicts the narrative that is shaped by dating apps and online personas with Nina Dobrev’s character being catfished by Josh, who is played by Jimmy O. Yang. Love Hard spotlighted its Asian lead as confident and desirable on his own terms, pulling away from the framing of Asian actors as punchlines or side characters.
In 2022 Lifetime released A Hollywood Christmas, with Jessika Van as the lead. She plays Jessica, a filmmaker who has become well known for directing Christmas movies, but when she meets a network executive who wants to stop the production of her latest film, we get to see her character put to the test. Workplace conflict evolves into a romantic story and viewers get to watch how she navigates ambition and love, a role that is almost never given to Asian actresses.
A more cultural holiday movie would be Christmas at the Golden Dragon, a film that all generations can relate to. This Hallmark movie follows a neighborhood family-owned Chinese restaurant that announces its closure just before Christmas. Throughout the movie, we get to see the dynamics of Asian American households, which is something that is completely overlooked on the big screens.
And finally, A Big Fat Family Christmas, another Hallmark movie centered around a Vietnamese American family and their cultural expectations during the holiday season. Viewers get a close look at familiar pressures of family tradition and generational beliefs. Having a Vietnamese family star in this film tells Hollywood that Asian American stories are not niche, but rather relatable and deserving of a place in holiday movies.
.jpg)
Articles
- Manila-Beijing Talks Resume on South China Sea, Energy Security
- India Signals Acceptance of E-commerce Tariff Moratorium but Balks at US Push for Permanent Extension
- AI Deepfakes Rampant in 2026 US Midterm Campaigns
- No Kings Rallies Against Trump Planned in Thousands of US Cities
- Indonesia's Social Media Curbs for Under-16s Create Confusion
- Tiger Woods Arrested for DUI After Florida Rollover
- BTS Tops UK Charts with Comeback Album
- Let's Be Good Again So We Can Be Great Again
- Iran-Linked Hackers Access FBI Director's Personal Email, Publish Online
- US Can Confirm Only a Third of Iran's Missile Arsenal Destroyed,
Asian American Success Stories
- Asian American Polls
- Asian American Parenting
- Personalities
- Identity
- The 130 Most Inspiring Asian Americans of All Time
- 12 Most Brilliant Asian Americans
- Greatest Asian American War Heroes
- Asian American Digital Pioneers
- New Asian American Imagemakers
- Asian American Innovators
- The 20 Most Inspiring Asian Sports Stars
- 5 Most Daring Asian Americans
- Surprising Superstars
- TV’s Hottest Asians
- 100 Greatest Asian American Entrepreneurs
