by lhb412 » Thu Jun 29, 2017 12:47 pm
Okja
Bong Joon-ho directs a story about a South Korean farm girl named Mija who discovers that her best friend, the eponymous genetically engineered super pig, is just part of a massive publicity stunt to promote a new kind of meat and give it a environmentally friendly, humane veneer. When Okja is shipped to America, Mija finds herself pulled in two directions by a group of animal rights activists on one side and a corporation set on using her as part of their marketing on the other. She just wants Okja back.
It's one part E.T., one part Babe, dash of Miyazaki and Mighty Joe Young, combined with a documentary on food production. Also, Bong pitches his actors more theatrical than naturalistic and I like that overall.
The movie has been called heavy handed, but it's hard to find anything unfair about the movie's presentation of the livestock industry. I see pens and slaughterhouses much worse than the depressing/scary ones in the film all the time here in the rural South. I also liked that the animal rights activists are portrayed as basically heroic, but it's members flawed and somewhat crazy, and the workers for the 'villainous' corporation all just seem like they're desperately trying to not ruffle feathers and keep their jobs, which is super relatable. The true villian of the movie is the depressing banality of conveience.
I know Netflix has made big movies before, and I know Stranger Things was so big last summer the phenomenon felt like a blockbuster movie, but this feels like the first blockbuster Netflix movie.