water celery

Bryon 2022-04-20 09:01:59

Minari (water celery), although it can fall to the ground and take root anywhere, does not dare to root too deep, and is always nervous. Like drifting duckweed, turbulent, afraid, but there is a kind of strength supporting it Arkansas, not ostracized, but tenderly accepted by the natives. When they face their son's heart disease, financial constraints, elderly parents who need to support, cut off water and fire, and face a life with no turning point in sight, they can always grow as strong as water celery by the creek. Find a new direction, dig a new well, and start life again. Such a detailed description of the difficulties of life, the food, clothing, housing and transportation of life makes people feel closer, more natural, and more resonant. It is different from the urban difficulties and confusion of the previous TV bureau "Beijing, Shanghai and Guangzhou Don't Believe in Tears". This detailed description, the feeling of empathy, and finally the warmth and strength.

View more about Minari reviews

Extended Reading
  • Chelsey 2021-12-25 08:01:15

    Boldly predict that South Korean actors will be nominated for the first Oscar actor award.

  • Ellen 2022-03-27 09:01:12

    7.0/10 A decent American college narrative. Cress (Minari) can grow tenaciously in any environment—the metaphor that seems to have open potential and cultural tolerance is still essentially limited to the stereotyped East Asian national experience. If we follow Stuart Hall's teachings and see representation as an intervention and shaping energy of reality rather than a passive representation of a mirror of reality, then in the context of cultural identity politics in 2020, we should perhaps call for such a An image that refuses to be a Minari—rejects any form of self-consolation and lacks a narrative of suffering, whether political or aesthetic—in contrast, it needs precisely that which burns unrealistic aspirations and exhaustion. The burdened raging fire of the withered car.

Minari quotes

  • Soonja: Minari is truly the best. It grows anywhere, like weeds. So anyone can pick and eat it. Rich or poor, anyone can enjoy it and be healthy. Minari can be put in kimchi, put in stew, put in soup. It can be medicine if you are sick. Minari is wonderful, wonderful!

  • Jacob: They need to see me succeed at something for once.

    Monica: For what? Isn't it more important for them to see us together?

    Jacob: You go ahead and do what you want. Even if I fail, I have to finish what I started.