MovieChat Forums > Madeo (2009) Discussion > For non-Koreans. Background info. and th...

For non-Koreans. Background info. and things you probably missed.


Mrs. Kim:

Since Mrs. Kim had been playing a role of a mother in T.V series called 'farm dairies' for more than two decades, she has become an ultimate icon of 'the mother' in South Korea. In the show, she was shown as a traditional, thoughtful, and wise mother who deeply loves her sons.

In the movie, she still plays the similar kind of mother but you know there's twist. Such twist greatly thickens the plot and one of the fundamental questions the film asks: the mother, as usual, gives unconditional love toward her offspring but can such love justify the injustice?

For non-Koreans wouldn't know what Mrs. Kim represents(it's not even something Koreans know or understand, her image of being the mother hits them from the unconscious level, the film loses great portion of its sense. This is something you should keep it mind.

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The significance of ending:

'Thank You Parents Bus Tour' is where bunch of parents from country-side go on a few days of tour across the country. As you see in the film, they sing and dance crazy in the bus. It's like being in a club except it's actually a freaking bus. It's a common cultural practice among elders in country side.

The significance is that, through the brilliant camerawork and lighting, we lose track of the mother. She gradually fades away into the crowd. It's not regular crowd but other mothers. She becomes representation of other mothers while other mothers become representation of the mother. Think semiotics.

Such notion is significant when you think about what a mother and parent in general represents in South Korea. Above mentioned unconditional love is seen as the greatest thing ever. However, it has its own dark side. Generally speaking, parents are blindly in love with their children that they produce very spoiled kids.
You may ask, regardless of where you came from, it's the same issue in all across the globe but South Korea really stands above on that notion. If you have lived in South Korea, you'd get a better sense of this issue (I've heard China is pretty much the same.)

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The director:

One thing you should keep it mind is that the director, Joon-ho Bong, always injects very strong yet subtle social commentary notions in his films. Those who do not know history, culture, issues of South Korea would miss great deal of what lies underneath.



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lol being korean. I got this from the ending too. Man... oh man this is like the best movie ever if your Korean.

The significance of ending:

'Thank You Parents Bus Tour' is where bunch of parents from country-side go on a few days of tour across the country. As you see in the film, they sing and dance crazy in the bus. It's like being in a club except it's actually a freaking bus. It's a common cultural practice among elders in country side.

The significance is that, through the brilliant camerawork and lighting, we lose track of the mother. She gradually fades away into the crowd. It's not regular crowd but other mothers. She becomes representation of other mothers while other mothers become representation of the mother. Think semiotics.

Such notion is significant when you think about what a mother and parent in general represents in South Korea. Above mentioned unconditional love is seen as the greatest thing ever. However, it has its own dark side. Generally speaking, parents are blindly in love with their children that they produce very spoiled kids.
You may ask, regardless of where you came from, it's the same issue in all across the globe but South Korea really stands above on that notion. If you have lived in South Korea, you'd get a better sense of this issue (I've heard China is pretty much the same.)


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Lol I like how you're Korean & you're username is Yellowman88... maybe I'm being to obvious but.... yea? lol

See? That's Why You Keep Getting Molested - American Dad

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Thank you so much for providing this background info. It really helps with understanding certain themes in this movie, and especially the final scene. Would love to know more.

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Cool post in general--it's nice to know more about the actress and how the film relates to her TV career there, which I didn't realize but re this:

Such notion is significant when you think about what a mother and parent in general represents in South Korea. Above mentioned unconditional love is seen as the greatest thing ever. However, it has its own dark side. Generally speaking, parents are blindly in love with their children that they produce very spoiled kids.
You may ask, regardless of where you came from, it's the same issue in all across the globe but South Korea really stands above on that notion. If you have lived in South Korea, you'd get a better sense of this issue (I've heard China is pretty much the same.)
That really isn't at all a geographically-rooted, or unique cultural attitude.



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Great write up.
You seem to have a thorough knowledge of the movie so could you plz answer some of the questions that I have.

1)I figured the opening sequence follows her burning the old man's house.
Does her dancing mean that she has forgotten that memory by accupenturing herself?
If not then what is it?

2)What does the mother's shocked face mean when her son shows her the needles he found at the burnt house?
Is it the shock of her crime being found out by her son or resurfacing of a memory she might have supressed?

3)Seeing the old man's bashed skull she screams and then we cut to a shot of her son at the crime scene making hand gestures.What does this mean?

4)This is not a question, just an opinion...
Her son's best friend character is very poorly/differently written. On one hand he wrongly accuses her son of breaking the rear window, blackmails her mother and on the other hand he helps the mother in the investigation and also helps her son in the very beginning in the hit and run.
He's very human that way but still I found something off about him

Forget it,Jake. It's Chinatown

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3 years later...
Excellent insights, thank you.

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Brilliant insights. I think a lot of the jokes on Joon-Ho Bong's films go over non-Koreans' heads. I really noticed this in Gwoemul.

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Thanks for this post! Great movie.

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