Also, if Bong Joon Ho isn't trying to say that the poor are parasites then what is the parasite? — JohnRB
The movie shows that under Capitalism, both the rich and the poor are parasites to one another, and that class distinctions are arbitrary. — Maw
The Kim family are intelligent (they beguile the Park family), and skilled (they quickly become skilled at the jobs they do), despite being poor.
The movie ends with Ki-Woo dreaming of becoming rich and successful and saving his father, but this ideal of social mobility is quickly revealed to be a delusion.
The movie shows that under Capitalism, both the rich and the poor are parasites to one another, and that class distinctions are arbitrary. — Maw
It's an incredibly naive reading to think that 'parasite' refers only to the poor family, and not - perhaps especially so - the rich one too (to say nothing of the cellar dwellers).
They can't even wash dishes, they can't drive themselves, so they leech off the poor family's labor. So both are parasites."
I don't even know what we're arguing here. — BitconnectCarlos
the downfall of the poor family began when they attempted to eliminate the other poor couple in the basement. They seemed to be doing fine up until then. In other words, there just wasn't unity with their socio-economic class. Once the infighting began, it all started to unravel. — BitconnectCarlos
Additionally, the poor family is definitely craftier than the rich family. — BitconnectCarlos
As mentioned, the rich dad in particular is condescending and especially with that remark about how poor people smell the rich really don't come off well. — BitconnectCarlos
Where is the audience supposed to make the link with capitalism? — JohnRB
It's an incredibly naive reading to think that 'parasite' refers only to the poor family, and not - perhaps especially so - the rich one too (to say nothing of the cellar dwellers). — StreetlightX
One of the great joys of the movie is coming to realize this, the way it kind of slowly subverts your expectations. — StreetlightX
Also, one of the film's strengths is precisely in not simply casting the rich and poor family along straightforward good/evil lines. — StreetlightX
The poor family are clearly the protagonists (how the OP can think otherwise is beyond me) — StreetlightX
But the film does a great job in showing how their actions are deeply motivated - and in some manner necessitated - by their class position, and not simply their individual 'moral dispositions' or whathaveyou. — StreetlightX
In other words, societal structure is foregrounded in a way that undoes any simplistic individualist reading. — StreetlightX
If there's any notion that 'greed for money leads to tregedy', its very specifically clear that it does so under our specific societal arrangements — StreetlightX
What do you expect? A character to turn to the audience and say "this is a movie about Capitalism"? This isn't a Marvel movie. — Maw
The director has stated “Okja, Snowpiercer, Parasite, they’re all stories about capitalism," so that's probably a good indication to start with.
If this were actually real the rich guy has given that family a huge pay raise and probably taken them out of poverty. But nah he's a parasite. — BitconnectCarlos
Isn't the director really suggesting we are ALL parasites? I get that "parasite" is very extreme, but they may just be pointing out that we all rely on each other.
I don't feel comfortable extending his conclusion that far. — BitconnectCarlos
I can't imagine he'd portray a man who makes an honest day's living as, say, a manual laborer as a parasite. — BitconnectCarlos
Then there's people who just work for themselves who'd fall outside the scope of what he's saying here about parasitism. — BitconnectCarlos
The poor family here was quite pernicious. — BitconnectCarlos
If we go back to the director's quote: "But if you look at it the other way, you can say that rich family, they're also parasites in terms of labor. They can't even wash dishes, they can't drive themselves, so they leech off the poor family's labor. So both are parasites." - He seems to be saying that wealthy families who employs maid and drivers are parasites..... it doesn't make a lot of sense. — BitconnectCarlos
If you're just going to look at it from a marxist perspective then aren't all employers parasites? — BitconnectCarlos
the real question is structural: how and why is morality engendered in the way it is, in the film? — StreetlightX
(1) ignore entirely the cinematic elements of the movie and remain inadequately at the level of sheer narrative — StreetlightX
(2) ignore, as I said, the utterly obvious societal positions that inform the actions of the characters — StreetlightX
(which in turn is why the film - to anyone with a half-developed cinematic eye - acts as a commentary and critique of the existence of those positions, and their pernicious effects). — StreetlightX
But this takes place against the backdrop of their terrible living conditions: they have shitty/no wifi, drunks pee outside their window, their house gets fumigated, etc. Their desire to improve their lot and their conditions of living cannot be treated in isolation, the one informs the other, and if you try and treat their individual actions without taking this into account, your reading of the film will be absolutely stunted. — StreetlightX
This, in turn is contrasted with the exorbitant privilege of the Parks, whose needs are expressly not that of just survival, but of sheer excess. — StreetlightX
Without pointing out the obvious, it's clear their approach to the world is similarly informed by their position in life. The mum says it outright!: "She's nice because they're rich... If I were rich I'd be nice too - even nicer!". — StreetlightX
Another great example of how it seems some are unable to not view things through their assumed lense.
The movie makes no mention of climate change. We might as well assume that since the flood doesn't play a major factor in the movie, the movie must be telling us that climate change won't be a major issue either. Since the family is only temporarily displaced by the flood, Bong Joon Ho means to communicate that climate alarmism is false.
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