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Minari's immigrant story rides awards season wave

A new movie about a Korean-immigrant family is enjoying some awards season attention. CBC News spoke to the director and actor Steven Yeun about what sets the film apart.

Buzz about Korean-American family drama builds as Oscars, Golden Globes approach

Steven Yeun plays a father who uproots his family to pursue his dream of growing Korean vegetables in the family drama Minari. (A24)

A father and family arrive at an empty field in Arkansas.Their home is a trailer up on cinder blocks.

While the wife surveys the brushwith apprehension, the father only sees potential.

These are the opening moments of Minari, a family drama set in the 1980s. With the man vs. nature backdrop, the film feels like a classic slice of Americana.But drawing on his own experience,director Lee Isaac Chung reframes the archetypalstory throughimmigrant eyes.

Steven Yeunplays the father, Jacob, who uprooted his wife and two children from their lives in California to pursue his dream of growing Korean vegetables.

Minari is a quietly powerful film that pulls you in slowly. And now, thisintimate family drama is being touted as an Oscar contender. With the success of moviessuch as The Farewell, Parasite and the box office smash Crazy Rich Asians, it's the latest sign of Hollywood embracing a broader range of stories.

Director Lee Issac Chung, right, on set with Yeun and Will Patton. (A24)

But slotting Minari into the "Asian film" category does a disservice to the specific story Chung zeroes in on.

Besides the heart-wrenching plot, the subtle magic of Minari is how culture is just one part of the landscape.

Yeun, a journeyman actor who has appeared in in everything from the zombie series The Walking Dead, to thethriller Burning,says he connected with the immigrant's perspective the moment he read the script.

As a young boy,Yeun's family moved from Seoul to Regina, Sask., where they lived for a year before settling in Michigan. While the Korean experience, including the casual racism the family weathers, is threaded throughout the film, he says it was the relationshipsthat spoke to him.

"It really is a family experiencing a thing together," he said."They're trying to uphold their part and in doing so they miss and disconnect from each other."

As the Golden Globes and the Oscars creep closer, the buzz around Minari is growing.Kim's Convenience actor Andrew Phung caught the film at a recent Reel Asian Film Festival screening. Raised by Vietnamese parents in Alberta, he says he related strongly to the film.

Actor Andrew Phung caught an early preview of Minari and says it connected with his experience as a young child of Vietnamese immigrants growing up in Alberta. (CBC)

"I've been there," Phung said. "I've seen my father and my mother struggle to make a life. The four years they worked opposite schedules, taking turns taking care."

Phung also recognized the tension:"The distance between children and father in an Asian family, this something that was so authentic."

Even though his path was different, Phung says he saw himself in a pivotal moment in Minariwhen the grandmother, played by Yuh-jung Youn, comes to stay bringing the hot pepper, dried anchovies and other Korean ingredients that are hard to come by.

"That is such a universal thing," said Phung, "Where your grandparents come and you don't know them and they got all this stuff from the old country that they're going to make you eat. I've been there. I appreciate Vietnamese food now, but as a kid, I didn't want to eat pho. Just get me the McDonald's."

The title Minarirefers to a plant used in Korean cooking and known for its hardiness. Like the dogged determination of the fatherJacob, it doesn't die easily. While some events in the film are dramatized, Chung says he drew on the stubbornness of his own father, who uprooted the family from Denver to eventually settle in Arkansas to start a50-acre farm.

As Minarienjoysa wave of critical acclaim, Chung says the key is being true to your own story.

"It needs to be personal in some way," he said. "I feel like stories about Asian-Americans, they don't have to define themselves by the majority gaze or the white gaze [anymore] but really stay true to who they are inside."

Asfor Yeun,he hopes the focus on authentic, culturally rich storiescontinues.

"I hope we're all waking up to connecting with each other. Not moving past or ignoring the cultures and the specificitiesof where we individually come from but embracing those things in a human way," he said.

"I really hope we're heading there."

Alan S. Kim and Yuh-Jung Youn make an unusual pair as the son and grandmother who go on walks and look for places to plant the herb Minari. (A24)