The lungsFour Academy Awards, including the Oscar for Best Photo, have raised the profile of the film announced at the highest levels ever seen. It has returned to theaters around the world, giving viewers who missed out on its original use the opportunity to discover what all the fuss is about.
President Trump looks disinterested in the views The lungs or once; maybe subtitles would be a problem for him? But many fans of the film have found that Bil Joon-ho is miraculously focused, like a hot ram-don dish, growing more satisfied with the second aid.
We can't get enough The lungs in Polgongon, so here are some of the best points we received when watching the film again – which we recommend doing.
(Vol. Note: The following contains spoilers for The lungs.)
Petrana
The Park family has never looked down. This was a great relief at first glance, as it means that Kimsu can emerge while hiding under tables and beds underneath. But when I watched the film again, it felt like something more than something to do; they don't care to look down on them, because why should they?
Emily
The highlight of the second look is how often the characters notice how "good" everyone is. There is a line pointing to Chung-sook telling her husband that the Parks are “beautiful because they are rich, ”but the Park family also talks about how good the Kim family. Mon-gwang tells her husband that Chung-sook is a good lady. Even if he plans to expel Mr.'s driver. Park, Ki-jung mentioned that he seemed like that good. Feeling that everyone is described as “beautiful” feels particularly cut when you know the climax of an indirect film. This word is so often conveyed that it becomes meaningless.
Samit
The lungs it offers insightful exploration of the myth of self-promotion with your bootstraps proverbials. It's a commentary on the hardest part of South Korea's unhealthy society, but perhaps more appropriate in the U.S., where racism continues to perpetuate this issue. And it's not until I re-started the film that I got in touch with my work.
Ask people who are opposed to broader community programs about understanding the backdrop of their position, and you'll find what they hear that will tell you something about their value system. Some of them will say they do not want their tax dollars to be given to “lazy” people who choose to make a living through government subsidies rather than trying to find work. These people may also invoke some of the ideas that embody our patriotic notion of American identity: the spirit of business, the strong cunning, the character of the Protestant work. There is a good chance of overlapping between this group and the people who oppose measures to strengthen and diversify the workplace – the kinds of people who say that the existing system works because planning is when the cream goes up.
The cream thing, though, is that it's fluffy and white.
I think Mr. Park worked hard to find his whereabouts, running a tech company. What have you done? Kim to qualify for her family apartment and low socioeconomic status? He tried to start his own business, but his Taiwanese cake shop continued – like that of Geun-sae, who was forced to hide borrowing sharks. Kim's should take any job they can get, such as the minimum wage for jobs that roll up pizza boxes. How do they break free from poverty?
No action. Ki-woo failed many college entrance exams, but was lucky he got into a high-paying gig when his friend Min-hyuk praised him as an English teacher of Parks' daughter. And then how do some Kims plan to do the work they do for the Park family? Each one of them compliments the next person to Mr. or Mrs. Park. In fact, Parks even hired its first owner of the house, Mon-gwang, based on concessions from the previous owner.
Of course, Kim has varying degrees of qualification in the jobs they end up with. But these traumatized people would never have the opportunity to interact with people like Park – let alone their employed people – without the risk of meeting between friends. A recommendation from a trusted source, someone you know (or think you know), is the highest amount in the world of Parks.
The same is true of fields such as journalism. It's easy to tell a aspiring writer to want to use all the job openings and to distribute the pieces to anyone who asks. But the fact is that without incentives or attempts to deviate from the status quo, organizers will tend to delegate tasks to people they already know – and those people often look like them. In this line of work, the default is for white men. As a member of an underrepresented group (women, people of color, LGBTQ people, etc.), it can be very difficult to be employed when people in power, such as The lungs, it won't give you a chance because they don't even know you exist.
Karen
The portrayal of Geun-sae being underrated is a little shocking because there is no real sign of him in the first half of the film. There is a clear telling, however, that will only subscribe to those watching The lungs second: In a nutshell, the flashlights above the steps of the Park house, revealed to be under the control of Geun-sae by changing into a basement, are more than just a dress stop. They are secret arrows we used to ignore because, as Parks, we didn't know they were.
Spots
With the unveiling of the plan – and I no longer need to follow along with the subtitles – I found myself exploring Bong Joon-ho's independent, sought-after mentors. Bong, who is famous for drawing loads of complex storyboards reads like a lie (so much so The lungs the drawings will be graphic novel later this year), it turns the gun into a bigger picture as its big jigsaw puzzle movie.
First shooting feet down from the windows of the apartment is immediately established in both geography and theme: The Kim family lives below the community. Their home, which was built by Bong's production design team, puts them at a 2.35: 1 aspect ratio when they practice the lines of their big con. The building is breathtaking, and Bong takes full advantage of the opportunity, pulling back wide to bless the setting. Look closer, and you begin to see the beauty of the rich and poor in the middle too many songs, from the display in the window pane to the characters appearing in invisible places.
Bong brings a kind of enigmatic-but-meticulous guide that makes you jump straight down 180 degrees law definition, whether you're a film star or not. We've seen so many movies that just shoot action to convey the story The lungs feel like magic.
Charlie
Many things happened to me a second time. There was a role played by the scent in the story; how the old landlord carries himself in front of the Parks, then shows with black eyes and bloody lips to meet the Kims; how the Kims road was laid out to drain the flood, and the durability of that set. But my mind is still inside the shelter where the whole community is gathered for the night.
I found myself searching for the children of young children they might have been, their looks and how their parents were taking care of them. This is where I see a myriad of donated clothes, and patient workers standing behind them while people scream in frustration. And I remind you that it's always been Mr Kim's words from the night before.
“You said you had a plan,” Ki-woo whispered to his father that night.
"Do you know what kind of plan will never fail?" Mr Kim asks his son. "There is no plan at all."
The deep Korean concerts of this phrase just flowed out of his mouth like blood.
“When you make a plan, life doesn't work out that way,” he says, lying on a bed and still clinging to the grass. “That is why people should not organize themselves. Without a plan, nothing goes wrong. ”
I've ever felt that kind of despair before. I rubbed in doubt, wondered what the hell I had found for myself and my family, and put my arm over my eyes to try and stop the light. Throughout the movie, that moment felt real to me as a father. As someone who is powerless against the wheels of the world around me. It's perfect, and works to put annotations in the movie's backroom "kill to shoot. ”
Ki-woo just can't stop making plans. He cannot set aside the dream of climbing that ladder. It will hurt him and his family, and there is nothing his father can do about it.