Ky Nam Inn (Leon Le) Vietnam

Ky Nam Inn
Leon Le
Vietnam. 2025. 140 min

Ten years after the war, Saigon is still in the midst of reconstruction. Widowed Ky Nam runs a small restaurant in a communal housing complex, where residents share a central courtyard and know every detail of each other’s lives. She has adopted and is raising Su, a French–Vietnamese mixed-race child. One day, Khang, a young man translating Saint-Exupéry’s The Little Prince into Vietnamese, moves into the unit upstairs. With his privileged background and natural charm, it is only natural that he draws the attention of those around him. Yet from the very first day, Khang finds himself gradually drawn to Ky Nam, who once saved him from a crisis. The highlight of this film, which evokes the tenderness of a romantic watercolor painting, is the late sequence in which the two walk through the streets of Saigon all night, enacting a dreamlike farewell ritual. Carried along by the young man’s narration, the scene leaves their shared story suspended in an eternal present.

Leon Le is a director with a background in dance, singing, and acting, who works between New York and Ho Chi Minh City. His short films Dawn (2012) and Talking to My Mother (2014) were invited to over 100 film festivals worldwide. His feature debut Song Lang (2018) won more than 50 awards, including the Tokyo Gemstone Award at the Tokyo International Film Festival and Best Narrative Feature at the Seattle Queer Film Festival. Ky Nam Inn is his second feature film.

PRESS KIT

kynaminn@gmail.com

One thought on “Ky Nam Inn (Leon Le) Vietnam”

  1. Pingback: Official Section |

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.