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Aileen Wu, is a Chinese-American actor, director, writer, producer currently based in Brooklyn, NY and Vancouver, BC. Throughout her teenage immigration experience, Aileen used creative storytelling as a tool to unpack the mysteries of cultural relativism. And lately, each project has been an opportunity to challenge the confines of communication and empathy. Aileen made her off-broadway acting debut in 2019 as Cordelia in Smith Street Stage’s new adaptation, LEAR: THAT OLD MAN I USED TO KNOW. In the following year, she made her directing debut through NYU’s Chinese Students & Scholars Association with her new play, THE POEM OF FORGETFULNESS, using a devised and experimental theatre approach. Recent producing credits include theatre documentary, HAMLET: REHEARSED (for Smith Street Stage), narrative short-film, FISH TANK (for the 2021 Run N’ Gun 48 Hr Filmmaking Competition) and award winning ultra-short-film CLOSING DOORS (for the 16th Annual Mighty Asian Moviemaking Marathon at the Vancouver Asian Film Festival).

Fifty late-teenagers receive mysterious invitations promising adventure, money, and a once-in-a-lifetime trip to Spooky Island, a luxurious private island known for its eerie legends and abandoned theme-park attractions. What begins as a thrilling getaway quickly becomes a nightmare when the guests discover they have been entered into a brutal survival competition. Forced to participate in a series of physically and psychologically punishing challenges, the teenagers must keep moving, obey strict rules, and outlast each other to survive. Overseen by a ruthless commander known only as The Director, the island becomes a deadly arena where alliances form, trust collapses, and every mistake can mean death. As the contestants realize the games are designed to break them, a small group begins searching for a way to expose the truth behind Spooky Island before none of them are left alive.
