The best immigrant movie I've ever seen. The director's autobiographical story about his childhood.
I always wanted to watch it because I was famous, but I forgot about it. Until a few days ago, Grandma Yoon Yuzhen won an Oscar. The news of the supporting actress in Korea was flying all over the sky. After the introduction of the professor in the class was over, I immediately found it in the middle of the term and watched it.
I like most of the metaphors. Delicate emotions are more flavorful than expressing the meaning directly.
Big and small failures and acceptances in the lives of immigrant families trying to put down roots in a barren and unfamiliar land
In the beginning, my father distrusted American culture and did not believe that he was integrated into the random planted cress from a foreign land, but it can grow better and more prosperous than the vegetables he carefully cultivated. The parents also overprotected their younger son from the beginning to the end. I went to pick cress with my little son. My mother didn't like her husband's disregard for his wife's and children's career.
Grandma hugged her grandson that night and said that grandma won't let you die, you'll be fine, maybe you really made a deal with God I can't do it. Grandma Yin Ruzhen is really good at acting. From the very first moment she appeared on the camera, I felt distressed. Maybe it was because I couldn't see how the old man's character could always be brought into my own grandma in one second. is the most grandma's grandmother
The whole movie is very flat, there are no emotional breaking points, and there is no plot that can make the audience cry When I go to something, I can really understand that feeling. There is the smell of missing, the bond of family and the memory of love.
But it's a pity that the ending is a bit over and not over, but the whole thing is still very memorable.
View more about Minari reviews