Writer/director Lee Isaac Chung’s candid reflection on the Korean-American migration focuses on the fictional, first-generation Yi family’s pursuit of the American dream on a 50-acre farm in rural Arkansas—and should resonate with anyone familiar with the immigrant experience. Told from the point-of-view of adorable six-year-old David (Alan Kim), who has a heart murmur, it introduces his industrious father Jacob (Steven Yeun), resentful mother Monica (Han Yeri), older sister Anne (Noel Kate Cho) and feisty maternal grandmother Soonja (Yuh-Jung Youn). After a cross-country trip from Los Angeles, the Yi family arrives at their new home, a prefab trailer, propped up on cinder blocks in the middle of a field. It’s the 1980s. While Monica settles into their new surroundings, Jacob’s first challenge is to locate water, so there’s an encounter with a ‘dozer,’ using a forked stick to indicate where to drill a well. Jacob finds a friend/helper in Paul (Will Patton), their evangelical Pentecostal neighbor. And the title stems from a popular, peppery, leafy-green Korean vegetable/herb, similar to watercress, that Soonja plants where it will thrive. It’s a metaphor.
As inspiration for this semi-autobiographical tale, filmmaker Chung cites Francois Truffaut’s The 400 Blows, along with Willa Cather’s autobiographical My Antonia and Anton Chekhov’s short story The Step. It’s about the dilemma of assimilation versus independence, taking various forms: Should they go to church to meet neighbors? If so, which church should they go to? Despite its prevalent Korean language (with English subtitles), it’s an observant, engaging, distinctly American story about an immigrant, determined to follow his dreams, yet struggling with the inevitable dilemmas of daily life. Recommended.