Minari 5 stars
I first heard of the film Minari at the 2020 Sundance Film Festival. I did not see it there but I heard that it was very well received by the audience. The movie, about a Korean immigrant family who move to Arkansas in the eighties was finally released about a year later, no doubt delayed by the pandemic. The movie was written and directed by Lee Isaac Chung, himself a Korean immigrant who came to America as a child with his family, so the film is semi-biographical with the young son David in the role of the writer. It is the father, Jacob’s (actor and executive director, Steven Yeun) dream to own his own farm growing vegetables native to Korea to sell to the local growing Asian community. This is of course very challenging and unfortunately, Jacob’s enthusiasm is not shared by his wife, Monica, who resents leaving California; thus, this becomes a source of tension in the family. There are a few references to racist attitudes from the locals, but for the most part the immigrant family is accepted in the community including at a nearby church they choose to attend. Probably the most interesting relationship is between young David and the grandma who travels from Korea to be with the family. At first he does not like her, saying things like she smells like Korea and doesn’t know how to be a good grandma. There are some funny scenes between the two and they eventually grow closer especially as grandma comes to know him and stands up for how he is treated. Grandma Soonja is played by Korean actress Youn Yuh-jung who would go on the win the Best Supporting Actress Academy Award for the role. The film is about the immigrant experience in America, but it is also about how a family deals with tough circumstances and the strain the relationships have to face. The film deserves its Academy Award nomination for Best Film, but some people may be put off by the ambiguous ending. The name Minari comes from a plant native to Korea that is used in many Asian dishes. It was part of the writer/director’s memory growing up and is known to be able to grow almost anywhere, making it a metaphor for the film.