What ‘Minari’ Means to Me

Lee Isaac Chung’s film took me through his past and into my own family’s story

Alexander Chee
GEN

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Yeri Han, Noel Kate Cho, Steven Yeun, and Alan S. Kim, from the cast of “Minari.” Photo: A24

I’ve had the feeling of following the film Minari around for a few months now since the first time I saw the trailer last year. I guessed Lee Isaac Chung’s Minari would be different to me from just about any other film I’d seen from how, even those two minutes, evoked my own memories in a way I wasn’t used to. I laughed with recognition while reading Jay Caspian Kang’s New York Times Magazine profile of Steven Yeun, one of the film’s stars, when he describes this feeling:

When the trailer for Minari appeared online this past fall, I texted the link to a Korean friend. She said she wasn’t sure she could watch the film because those two minutes seemed almost too accurate, too close to some memories she had left interred.

Yeun stars as Jacob, a young Korean American father, his character inspired by Chung’s father, who has left Los Angeles for Arkansas in the 1980s in a kind of second migration, hoping to start a farm raising Korean vegetables for the 30,000 Korean immigrants he knows are arriving a year, a number he has very confidently at his fingertips. He works as a chicken sexer, which involves separating female and male chicks from each other in an industrial chicken farm, and his wife, Monica, played by Yeri Han…

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Alexander Chee
GEN
Writer for

Author of the novels THE QUEEN OF THE NIGHT and EDINBURGH, and the essay collection HOW TO WRITE AN AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL NOVEL.