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Minari

Minari is the Korean name for a group of edible water-loving herbs, most often referring to Oenanthe javanica, commonly known as water celery or water dropwort in English. It is a semi-aquatic perennial native to East Asia, cultivated for tender green stalks and fragrant leaves. In Korean cuisine the herb is used fresh in soups, stews, kimchi, and side dishes, or stir-fried with garlic and sesame oil. It tolerates wet soils and can quickly establish in ponds, ditches, or rice paddies, where it adds a bright, celery-like flavor.

Minari (film) is a 2020 American drama directed by Lee Isaac Chung, written by Chung, and produced

Minari has thus entered popular discourse as both a culinary ingredient and a cultural symbol of immigrant

by
A24.
The
story
follows
a
Korean
American
family—Jacob
and
Monica
Yi,
their
children
David
and
Anne,
and
Jacob's
mother
Soon-ja—as
they
move
from
Los
Angeles
to
a
rural
farm
in
Arkansas
in
the
1980s
to
pursue
farming
and
a
better
life.
The
title
refers
to
the
minari
herb,
which
becomes
a
symbol
of
resilience
and
home
for
the
family
as
it
grows
alongside
their
dreams.
The
film
stars
Steven
Yeun,
Han
Ye-ri,
Youn
Yuh-jung,
Alan
S.
Kim,
and
Noel
Cho.
It
premiered
at
the
Sundance
Film
Festival
in
2020,
where
it
won
both
the
Grand
Jury
Prize
and
Audience
Award,
and
was
released
by
A24
later
that
year.
It
received
widespread
critical
praise
for
its
intimate
portrayal
of
immigrant
life
and
won
several
awards,
including
six
nominations
at
the
93rd
Academy
Awards,
with
Youn
Yuh-jung
winning
Best
Supporting
Actress.
families
in
the
United
States,
illustrating
how
a
simple
plant
can
connect
food,
memory,
and
belonging
across
generations.