Just click the "Edit page" button at the bottom of the page or learn more in the Synopsis submission guide. On its face, “I Am Another You” is not the most captivating documentary ever made. Her time with Olsen deepened the way she understands mental illness, she said. The more Wang pursues her subject, the more depth and complexity she finds in it, and we share her sense of discovery. Be the first to contribute! His is not a story that especially needed to be told. I Am Another You Directed by Nanfu Wang. Wang and Olsen are still in contact. "I Am Another You" ends with a kind of closure, but not a neat and tidy one. It looks like we don't have a Synopsis for this title yet. “I Am Another You” is finally so absorbing because it plays like a lyrical road odyssey that’s also a detective story. With Dylan, Nanfu Wang. Olsen’s still a traveler, which is the term Wang said Olsen and his girlfriend prefer to describe their lifestyle. At the end of the road, there are no simple answers. You start this journey with the author, years ago trying to escape from a world that did not feel right. Powerful, Life changing breakthroughs. I Am Another You is a story of breakthroughs. Fascinated by his choice and rejection of society's rules, Nanfu follows Dylan with her … I am another you/ Together we make One/ You are another me/ Separate we make none/ I am another you/ So when you make a frown/ You are another me/ I weep too, feeling deeper down/ I am another you/ When your eyes shine and show your smile/ You are another me/ My heart dances a jubilee, lasts quite a while/ I am another you/ You speak how I am/ Eating garbage, dodging police, and hitching rides with strangers, award-winning Chinese filmmaker Nanfu Wang shares the streets with a young drifter named Dylan who left a comfortable home and loving family for a life of intentional homelessness. I Am Another You - Movie Reviews Rotten Tomatoes, home of the Tomatometer, is the most trusted measurement of quality for Movies & TV. Its subject, Dylan, is barely sympathetic, and only toward the very end of the film, once the filmmaker retcons in some stuff about mental-illness.