Alan s. kim

A work of extraordinary delicacy, poignancy and tenderness: Minari reviewed

In the summer of 2018, when film-maker Lee Isaac Chung was on the brink of giving up filmmaking and had accepted a teaching job, he found himself writing a list of what he remembered growing up as a Korean-American in rural America in the 1980s. These โ€˜little visual memoriesโ€™ included, for example, the lunch pails his parents would take to their jobs at the chicken factory, or the minari โ€” a herb used in Korean cookery and medicine โ€” his father planted on their farm. This list became the film Minari, which lately won a Golden Globe and has been nominated for six Oscars. It is a work of extraordinary