Meewella | Critic

According to P

Tag: Kore-eda Hirokazu

QuickView: Broker (2022)

“I know everything. You’re not a family.”

Hae-jin

Kore-eda Hirokazu’s skill, on display here as in Shoplifters, is presenting found families — those cleaved together by choice rather than blood — in a way that feels both natural and intimate, with an excellent cast led by Parasite’s Song Kang-ho. Broker again explores this through good-hearted criminals, in this case a pair who obtain abandonned babies and sell them to families wishing to adopt. The film’s complications arise from two angles: a mother returning to recover her baby and two police officers hunting down the illegal brokers. Kore-eda’s script is compassionate toward the varying reasons for which mothers may make the difficult decision to give up children, whilst exploring the characters’ reasons for having strong views — particularly Dong-Soo upon returning to the orphanage where he grew up. Broker is a gentle, charming film even as the audience knows it cannot end happily for everyone. The dynamic of its makeshift family is not as nuanced as Shoplifters, but Broker is still a highly effective piece of cinema as Kore-eda continues to hone his craft away from the standard fare.

8/10

QuickView: Shoplifters (2018)

Shoplifters poster

“Sometimes it’s better to choose your own family.”

Nobuyo Shibata

Hirokazu Kore-eda’s quietly nuanced exploration of family reveals its layers gradually. Introducing its characters as petty thieves, one might expect a social commentary in the vein of Parasite. Instead, we learn that these are disparate strangers who formed their own family. The cluttered mise-en-scene of the small house they share speaks volumes. When they take in a neglected young girl, we see the counterpoint to the stereotypical abduction tale, with Yuri welcomed into a supportive — if morally dubious — household. Shoplifters‘ success hinges on the naturalistic central performances, from the adolescent beginning to question his family to the couple craving acceptance as parents. 75-year-old Kirin Kiki, who died the year Shoplifters was released, reveals both the bitter loneliness of an abandoned woman and the joy she finds in the company of her new family. Through a family constructed by choice rather than blood, we are able to examine the obligations implicit in those relationships and the boundaries of that loyalty when tested. These are wonderfully realised and memorable characters who will remain with the viewer, but it is the intangible strings that connect them which will leave lingering questions.

9/10

"A film is a petrified fountain of thought."

(CC) BY-NC 2003-2025 Priyan Meewella

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