

What if healing generational trauma looked like robbing a bank with hand puppets?
An imaginative telling of the story of a Vietnamese American mother-daughter duo who, in their attempt to heal the rift between them, reenact and satirize scenes from celebrated Vietnam War films while depicting a diasporic reality. Two inventive storylines complicate The MOTHERLOAD to levels of absurdity. Both of these glide in and out beneath the narrative backbone of Jessca and Kim’s personal story, and reflect the stunning disconnect between the Vietnamese diaspora and the world’s understanding of their presence.
Direction
Dual directors crafting absurdist parallel realities
Writing
Satirical rewrites of iconic war film scenes
Practical Effects
Hand puppet sequences that somehow gut-punch you
Director
Van Tran Nguyen
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
The film weaponizes the 'Vietnam War film' genre itself—Apocalypse Now, Platoon, Full Metal Jacket—forcing audiences to confront whose stories Hollywood has centered for decades.
The hand puppet motif emerged from actual family traditions; Nguyen's grandmother used puppetry to communicate traumatic experiences she couldn't verbalize directly.