"I think that what should be mentioned to the "haters" is that, remember, this movie is not aimed at an American audience. The primary audience is Korean, and as a Korean-American I can recognize that there are some elements of this movie that would strike more of a chord with Korean audiences than with non-Koreans, especially Americans.
Koreans are a proud people, and at times can get quite emotional, especially when it comes to their family and sense of nationalism. Even I and other American born Koreans tend to have a small dose of that in our blood. Remember the scene at the train, with all the men going off to war and all the women and family members seeing them off? I know someone who called that scene cheesy and melodramatic, but I have actually seen old Korean women act like that during emotional times. This movie is a very effective representation of the kinds of feelings that this war brought upon my parents' and grandparents' generations.
On the other hand, I think that Americans in general tend to be more jaded and about irony and cynicism than Koreans, which is why I think people like the original poster find fault with the movie. The original poster calls the story unrealistic, but I think that the realism of the storyline is sort of besides the point. The movie isn't about plot, but about what Koreans went through emotionally as a result of this war, the Korean War.
Personally, I loved the film, but I have family members who lived in Korea in that era and no doubt the movie hit a little closer to home because of that.
For those of you who are non-Korean and can also appreciate this movie, that's great. But if you don't, well, I don't think the director was making the movie with you in mind in the first place. "
LOL I stopped reading the thread after THIS post... not that the other one's were any better beforehand...
But yeah, I'm American, and I was amazed at how this film got me to cry.. (I don't EVER cry lol)
And then I come on here and people say it's bad and I'm like "what?" and then I read how non-Koreans, "especially Americans", wouldn't get this movie and I'm like "what?" and then I see that Koreans are all "quite emotional" when it comes down to family and nationalism...
No attacks here, but saying this film is good or bad is about as factual as saying all Koreans give a sh*t about those things.... I am saying, for those of you who don't get me, that the above poster is wrong, that not all Koreans even care in the least bit about family and their nationality (I'm sure, as humans, they are diversed) and that a great amount of the Americans that saw this enjoyed it and that, finally, STEREOTYPING IS BULLSH*T
What's REALLY funny about this is that this was A MAJOR PLOT ELEMENT of the FILM. STEREOTYPING IS BULLSH*T.
k, class is out, pce guys :D
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