The Borneo Post

Drama ‘Minari’ pushes language, acting barriers

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SEOUL: A critically acclaimed family drama about Korean immigrants in the US is being touted as an Oscar contender after “Parasite” broke down barriers to non-English-language movies winning the highestpro­file accolades.

Based on Korean-American director Lee Isaac Chung’s own experience­s growing up in rural America in the 1980s, “Minari” won both the audience and grand jury prizes for US dramas at this year’s Sundance Film Festival.

After a sold-out Asian premiere last week at the Busan film festival, Asia’s largest, Hollywood trade outlet Variety reported the film’s stars — including Korean-American actor Steven Yeun — will campaign for acting categories at the Academy Awards.

But the critical success of “Minari” comes with AsianAmeri­can experience still vastly underrepre­sented in Hollywood, which has generally preferred to focus on Americans’ experience­s of Asia, particular­ly in war, or Asian-set fantasies such as “Mulan”.

The slew of awards for “Parasite” represente­d a nod towards internatio­nal diversity, said Brian Hu, a film professor at San Diego State University, “not American diversity, which still requires a lot more work”.

“It would be hugely historical for a Korean American film to be nominated” for the Oscars, he told AFP.

Despite their shared Korean roots, the two movies are very different: “Minari” is an American film shot almost entirely in Korean, featuring AsianAmeri­can experience­s, while “Parasite,” a dark parable about the gulf between rich and poor in Seoul, was solely a South Korean production.

Childhood revisited

“Minari” stars Yeun — best known for his role in the

“Walking Dead” zombie television series — as Jacob, a young, Korean-born father who moves his family to an all-white town in rural Arkansas in pursuit of a better life.

He wants to start his own farm but his wife is sceptical and feels isolated, while their sevenyearo­ld son, David — a character inspired by director Chung’s younger self — finds himself increasing­ly torn

between two cultures. Yeun is renowned for his bilingual talent, receiving a best supporting actor prize from the Los Angeles Film Critics Associatio­n for his Korean-language performanc­e in the acclaimed thriller, “Burning”.

In “Minari”, Yeun often speaks Konglish, a style of sometimesb­roken English used by Korean speakers, for which he said he channelled his own immigrant parents who took him to the US when he was five.

The film reflected his own experience growing up as an immigrant in Michigan, he said, especially “this feeling of belonging nowhere, just caught in between the gaps of places”.

“You’re not Korean. You are not American. You kind of just fit in this weird space where you don’t feel grounded anywhere,” he told an online press conference at the Busan festival.

“It reminds me of my family and why we, you know, held each other so tight because that’s all we really had.”

‘Stereotypi­cal representa­tions’

The four Oscars for “Parasite” included Best Picture and Best Director, but nomination­s for any of the “Minari” actors would be the first for any Korean in the performanc­e categories at the Academy Awards. Film experts and activists say

there has been very limited AsianAmeri­can presence in Hollywood, with many Asian roles even played by white actors.

In one notorious example of “yellowface”, Luise Rainer won the 1937 Best Actress Oscar for playing a Chinese character in “The Good Earth”.

More recently, the casting of Emma Stone as a part-Hawaiian, part-Chinese character in 2015’s “Aloha” sparked controvers­y.

“Talented Asian and AsianAmeri­can actors have existed since the silent film era,” said Terry K Park, a lecturer in Asian American Studies at the University of Maryland, College Park.

“But they haven’t been given the same opportunit­ies to inhabit even stereotypi­cal representa­tions of their own identities, let alone complex ones.”

But films like “Parasite” and “Minari” could open doors to other subtitled movies and actors of Asian descent, experts say.

It was “extremely curious that Hollywood, located in LA, with a significan­t presence of Asian Americans, so long denied their very existence,” said John Lie, a sociology professor at the University of California, Berkeley.

The mainstream US “dream factory” clung on to “an older vision of America long after it was relevant”, he said, while cable TV dramas have become “not only more interestin­g but also more multiethni­c”.

“So Hollywood is belatedly catching up.” — AFP

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 ??  ?? This undated handout photo shows Korean-American director Lee director of the Korean immigrant drama ‘Minari’, posing for a photo.
This undated handout photo shows Korean-American director Lee director of the Korean immigrant drama ‘Minari’, posing for a photo.
 ?? — AFP photos ?? This undated handout photo shows Yeun (rigth, cap) in a scene from Korean immigrant drama ‘Minari’.
— AFP photos This undated handout photo shows Yeun (rigth, cap) in a scene from Korean immigrant drama ‘Minari’.

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