Review: ‘Hijacked’ (2025), starring Thái Hòa, Kaity Nguyễn, Thanh Sơn, Ma Ran Đô, Trâm Anh, Võ Điền Gia Huy, Lợi Trần, Ray Nguyễn, Bảo Định, Xuân Phúc and Trần Ngọc Vàng

December 6, 2025

by Carla Hay

Thanh Sơn and Thái Hòa in “Hijacked” (Photo courtesy of Galaxy Studio)

“Hijacked” (2025)

Directed by Ham Tran

Vietnamese with subtitles

Culture Representation: Taking place in Vietnam and in a flying airplane, in 1978 (and briefly in 1977), the action film “Hijacked” (inspired by true events) features an all-Asian cast of characters representing the working-class and middle-class.

Culture Clash: A Vietnamese plane is taken over by hijackers, whose only apparent goal is to get out of Vietnam.  

Culture Audience: “Hijacked” will appeal primarily to people who are fans of the movie’s headliners and disaster action movies that have more hysteria than a coherent plot.

Xuân Phúc and Trần Ngọc Vàng in “Hijacked” (Photo courtesy of Galaxy Studio)

“Hijacked” is inspired by true events about the increase in Vietnamese plane hijackings in the late 1970s. However, almost nothing about this tacky action flick looks realistic. Expect to see a lot of shouting, bloody fights, and horrible acting. A nonsensical plot twist that’s thrown into the movie makes everything look even more idiotic.

Directed by Ham Tram, “Hijacked” was co-written by Ham, Nguyễn Hoàng Dương and Nguyễn Mai Nhật Ánh. The movie takes place in Vietnam and mostly in the air during a hijacked plane that’s in flight. The movie was filmed on location in Vietnam. “Hijacked” is also titled “Death Battle on the Air,” depending on where the movie was released.

“Hijacked” begins with a caption explaining that in 1977, U.S. President Jimmy Carter signed an immigration act allowing approved Vietnamese people to immigrate to the United States as refugees of the Vietnam War. This immigration act led to hijackings of Vietnamese planes by people who wanted to go the United States “by any means necessary.” The airline company in “Hijacked” is called Vietnam Airlines. What the movie doesn’t mention is in real life, the airline company that experienced these late 1970s hijackings was Vietnam Civil Aviation, which didn’t change its name to Vietnam Airlines until 1993.

The movie shows one of these hijackings that took place in 1977. Vietnam Airlines Flight 137 is a Douglas DC-3 plane going from Ho Chi Minh City to Phu Quoc Island. This flight is based on the real-life Vietnam Civil Aviation Flight 509, which had 32 passengers and was hijacked on October 28, 1977. The hijackers wanted the plane to take a detour to Singapore. In the “Hijacked” movie, this hijacking is depicted only in the first 15 minutes.

Just like in real life, the movie shows that were four hijackers for this hijacking and two members of the crew were killed. However, the movie fabricates something that didn’t happen for this particular hijacking. In real life, two of the six crew members and no passengers were killed. In the movie, one of the passengers is killed when he apprehends a hijacker.

While the passenger has the hijacker in his grip, he jokingly says to a flight attendant: “Do I deserve a scarf now?” (Who says that during this type of crisis? Only people in a stupid movie like this one.) No sooner does he ask this moronic question, another hijacker sneaks up behind the passenger and slits the passenger’s throat with a knife.

The movie then abruptly segues to show Binh (played by played by Thanh Sơn,) an air marshal of the People’s Public Security of Vietnam), leading a training session to improve the fight and safety skills of airplane crew and security staffers. An air marshal named Minh (played by Hồ Thái Thiên Minh), who was killed on Vietnam Airlines Flight 137 just happened to be the brother of an air marshal named Son (played by Ma Ran Đô), who is on the next hijacked flight that’s depicted in the movie.

The movie’s second hijacked flight takes place in 1978. It’s Vietnam Airlines Flight 602, a Douglas DC-4 plane. This flight is based on the real-life Vietnam Civil Aviation Flight 501 that was hijacked on June 28, 1978, while going from departing from Da Nang International Airport to Phung Duc Airport. What happens on Vietnam Airlines Flight 602 takes up the majority of the movie.

The crew members on this flight include Binh, Son, flight captain Phong (played by Xuân Phúc), flight co-pilot Khanh (played by Trần Ngọc Vàng), flight attendant Tu Trinh (played by Kaity Nguyễn), and flight attendant Nhan (played by Tram Anh), who are all as generic as generic can be. This four male hijackers of this flight are group leader Long (played by Thái Hòa); Long’s son Suu (played by Bảo Định); and two brothers named Dan (played by Ray Nguyễn) and Ti (played by Võ Điền Gia Huy). Dan is the older brother.

To increase the drama and the tension, the movie has three of the crew members as expectant parents. Binh was on the plane so that he could visit his wife, who is due to give birth at any moment (and you know that the movie will show her going into labor during the hijacking. Khanh and Nhan, who are married to each other, are expecting their first child. Nhan is in the first trimester of her pregnancy. That’s about all you’ll find out about these main characters, who are all underdeveloped.

There are about 60 passengers on the plane, including the hijackers. Most of the passengers are just extras in the movie, which puts most of the passenger focus on a family of three people: a middle-aged man named Hai (played by Lợi Trần), his wife Phuong (played by Xuân Văn), and their son Dau (played by Bâo Di), who’s about 5 or 6 years old. Dau is carrying the ashes of Hai’s father in an urn. (And you can easily predict what will happen to those ashes during the chaos of this hijacking.)

Most of what’s seen in “Hijacked” takes place on the plane, with fleeting glimpses at some of what’s happening on the ground when the word gets out that the plane has been hijacked. Chief hijacker Long is a tyrant who physically and verbally abuses his son Suu, who is desperate to please Long. Flight attendant Nhan gets tortured by the hijackers. The hijackers have a gun, a knife and grenades. By the end of the movie, it’s still not clear what the hijackers’ motives are.

“Hijacked” has very choppy editing that takes unearned shortcuts and leaves many questions unanswered. One of the worst editing segues in the movie is when a fight breaks out between certain crew members and the hijackers. One of the hijackers gets knocked out. And then, the next thing you know, all the hijackers are tied up in a back storage room with red lighting, with the movie never explaining how the hijackers were tied up.

And the movie has too many ridiculous fights and explosions that would crash any plane that’s in flight, but this plane just keeps going during all the phony-looking mayhem. The movie’s dialogue is awful and is made even worse by the subpar performances. “Hijacked” is the type of movie that wants to pretend that people yelling, fake-looking fights, obnoxiously loud sound, and jerky editing can equal suspense. There is no real suspense in this annoying mess of a movie except wondering when it’s finally going to be over.

Galaxy Studio released “Hijacked” in select U.S. cinemas on December 5, 2025. The movie was released in Vietnam on September 19, 2025.

Review: ‘Money Kisses,’ starring Thiên An, Thu Trang, Lê Xuân Tiền, Ma Ran Đô, Tiến Luật, Huy Khánh and Hoàng Phi

May 13, 2025

by Carla Hay

Thiên An, Huỳnh Phương, Lê Xuân Tiền and Thu Trang in “Money Kisses” (Photo courtesy of Thu Trang Entertainment)

“Money Kisses”

Directed by Thu Trang

Vietnamese with subtitles

Culture Representation: Taking place in Vietnam, the romantic comedy film “Money Kisses” features an all-Asian cast of characters representing the working-class, middle-class and wealthy.

Culture Clash: Two working-class sisters, who live together and are heavily in debt, decide to have the younger sister date two young billionaires to possibly help with their money problems, and the sisters get unexpected results. 

Culture Audience: “Money Kisses” will appeal primarily to people who are fans of the movie’s headliners and people who like breezy romantic comedies that have some emotional drama.

Thiên An and Thu Trang in “Money Kisses” (Photo courtesy of Thu Trang Entertainment)

Some of the slapstick jokes are corny, but “Money Kisses” is mostly charming based on good performances and a few surprises. This romantic comedy (about a working-class woman who dates two rich men) is not about gold digging but about being authentic. Some of the movie is utterly predictable, while other parts take a few bold risks.

Directed by Thu Trang, “Money Kisses” was written by Nhi Bứi, Đồ Hóa Trà, Hô Thúc An and Đồ Như Thư. The movie takes place in an unnamed city in Vietnam, where “Money Kisses” was filmed on location. Alternate titles for the movie are “Billionaire Kisses” or “Nụ Hôn Bạc Tỷ,” which means “Billion Dollar Kiss” in Vietnamese.

The movie begins by showing the relationship of two sisters who live together in the house that they inherited from their deceased single mother. The two sisters have opposite personalities. Older sister Thúy Kieu (played by Thu Trang), who is in her early 40s, is hyper and impulsive. Younger sister Thúy Vân (played by Thiên An), who is in her mid-20s, is calm and meticulous.

Kieu works as a golf caddy at The Dalat at 1200 Country Club and Private Estate. Van works in a small stall selling bread that she makes in the sisters’ house. This small business was started by the sisters’ mother. It’s important to Van to continue this legacy.

Van’s dream is to study how to be a pastry chef in Paris and come back to Vietnam to open her own retail bakery. Kieu’s dream is to buy a condo with her boyfriend Đạt (played by Huy Khánh), and they have already made this investment at a complex under development called the Dream City Project. Đạt urged Kieu to invest in this complex. He takes Kieu for granted and keeps dangling the possibility that he will propose marriage to her.

The movie first shows the two young billionaires whom Van will end up dating at the same time. Nhât Quang (played by Lê Xuân Tiền) is a Harvard University graduate who is the heir to a chain of supermarkets called El Flaminco. Tú Henry (played by Ma Ran Đô) is the heir to a tourism corporation.

Quang and Henry, who have opposite personalities, are friends and rivals. Quang is very straight-laced and likes to wear business suits. Henry is a partying playboy who likes wearing leather jackets and jeans.

Near the beginning of the movie, Quang and Henry are seen racing each other on an expressway. Quang is driving a black Ferrari, while Henry is on a custom-made motorcycle. Around the same time as this race, Van is making a bread delivery on her moped.

Van narrowly misses getting into an accident when Henry almost crashes into her and nicks a mirror on the moped. They stop and have a brief, tense conversation. Van is annoyed but Henry is immediately attracted to her.

Van’s delivery is at the country club where Kieu works. Van is in a rush because the near-accident has caused her to be running late. In the reception area, she nearly runs into Quang. He’s immediately attracted to her too.

At work, Kieu is considered a little bit of an oddball misfit by the rich people she has to serve. She’s also clumsy and has a tendency to fall down. The movie doesn’t reveal right away that Kieu was born with one leg slightly shorter than the other. She’s very insecure about this disability but tries to not let this insecurity show.

One of Kieu’s co-workers is Phương Suói Vàng (played by Huỳnh Phương), who is a somewhat stereotypical “flamboyant” best friend. Quang has a business manager/friend/hanger-on named Trong (played by Tiến Luật), who is constantly asking to borrow money. Trong is not impressed when he first sees Kieu and thinks she looks “pitiful.”

Not long after Van’s fateful encounters with Quang and Henry, the sisters get very bad news: The Dream City Project was a scam. Not only did Kieu invest all of the sisters’ savings in the Dream City Project, she also secretly mortgaged the house and used that loan money to invest in the Dream City Project. All of that investment money is now gone.

Van is crushed by this betrayal when she finds out. She argues with Kieu about what they should do to solve this problem. One thing the sisters agree on is that they don’t want to sell the house, which is the biggest connection that they have to their mother.

On the suggestion of Dat, the two sisters visit a loan shark named Phi Den (played by Hoàng Phi), who makes an unreasonable offer: Pay back ₫ 1.3 million (which is about $501,000 in U.S. dollars in 2025) by the end of the month, or else he will take possession of the sisters’ house. Van and Kieu don’t want him to have the house, which is worth a lot more than ₫ 1.3 million, so they have to figure out a way to get the money before the end of the month. Phi Den is a violent thug who leads a gang of hoodlums, so going into business with him can be dangerous.

One day at the country club, Kieu sees a young female co-worker suddenly quit her job because she is now dating a wealthy guy whom she met at the club. Kieu then gets the idea for Van to start dating a wealthy guy who could possibly help relieve the sisters’ debt. She doesn’t expect Van to do anything sexual but just be an attractive companion.

Van, who is somewhat introverted, doesn’t really like the idea, but she goes along with it out of desperation. Kieu arranges for them to attend a golf tournament charity party, where many of the country club members are attending. Predictably, Quang and Henry see Van (this time, she’s dressed up and looks like a beauty queen) and their interest in her goes up considerably. As already shown in the movie’s trailer, Quang and Henry both start dating Van at the same time.

“Money Kisses” eventually reveals which suitor Van prefers. There are some hijinks along the way as the deadline approaches to pay back the money to Phi Den. The sisters also have some drama that goes back to their childhoods, when Van used to be bullied for having a disabled sister. Kieu’s insecurities have a lot to do with Kieu thinking that Van looks down on her for being the “screw-up” sister.

One of the reasons why “Money Kisses” works as well as it does is because the co-stars have terrific chemistry with each other. Thiên An and Thu Trang are entirely believable as sisters, who have their ups and downs but never really stop loving each other. The movie doesn’t follow convention of the older sister being wiser than the younger sister. In “Money Kisses,” the older sister is less responsible and not as emotionally mature as her younger sister.

“Money Kisses” starts off with a string of almost manic slapstick comedy scenes, but the movie gets better and more realistic as it goes along. The story isn’t entirely focused on which of the billionaire boyfriends will end up being Van’s choice, if she makes that choice at all. (Watch through the movie’s end credits to find out how this love triangle ends.) The bigger and more important story is about having the courage to face hard truths about one’s self-worth and identity.

Thu Trang Entertainment released “Money Kisses” in select U.S. cinemas on May 9, 2025. The movie was released in Vietnam on January 29, 2025.

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