Minari Ending: The Poetic Conclusion Explained (2024)

Minari Ending: The Poetic Conclusion Explained (1)

Minari, directed by Lee Isaac Chung, is a semi-autobiographical story about the Yi family. Jacob (Steven Yeun) moves his family from a comfortable life in California to a small town in Arkansas. Jacob dreams of starting a farm and living off the profits of that business. Life in Arkansas is far from what Jacob and his wife Monica (Yeri Han) hoped. All the film’s tension bubbles over into the heartbreaking but hopeful Minari ending.

In March 2021, Minari earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Picture, and star Steven Yeun and Korean film legend Youn Yuh-jung both earned acting nominations. Many people who watch Minari will be blown away by this quiet family epic about the American dream and all the struggles and triumphs that come with it. The Minari ending especially offers a satisfying and showstopping conclusion. Let’s deep dive into the Minari ending.

We're about to get into spoilers from the movie, so if you haven't watched it yet, read no further! And if you're looking to check it out, find out how to watch Minari streaming.

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What Happened At The End of Minari

Jacob, Monica, David (Alan S. Kim), and Anne (Noel Cho) receive good news when a cardiologist lets the family know that David’s heart murmur will likely heal on its own. Jacob then gets more good news when the grocery store owner agrees to have Jacob be his produce supplier. While Jacob, Monica, and the children are heading to the car, Jacob gleefully talks about how this deal came at the best time. Monica sends the children away and Jacob and her have a passionate confrontation.

She lets him know that she can no longer be with him. Jacob and she accept that their marriage is done. Meanwhile, grandma Soonja (Youn Yuh-jung) faces a trash fire that becomes uncontrollable. When the Yi family arrives, Jacob rushes to the barn to try to stop it, then he tries to save some of his produce.

After seeing that Soonja is all right, Monica rushes in as well. They eventually give up and Monica breaks down as they watch the barn burn. The movie's final scene is of Jacob and David at the creek picking minari, the only thriving plant.

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What Is Minari And What Does It Symbolize?

At one point in Minari, Soonja says to David and Anne, “do you even know what Minari is, you stupid Americans?” a cheeky nod to many viewers that are clueless about minari. As explained in the movie and by the cast, --Chung called it a weed in an interview with The Wrap, but Yuh-jung corrected him and said that it’s a vegetable-- minari is a versatile plant used in Korean households in various ways. It’s often used in cooking and as a medicine.

In an interview with Cinemablend, various cast and director Chung spoke about how minari is special because it’s a plant that thrives even in rough soil. He further explained in an interview on NPR’s Reset how minari really was something that his grandmother grew, and some of his memories with her tie back to them. He also explained that minari has a purifying effect and clears poor soil and water. In an interview with Deadline, Chung also added how minari doesn’t start to thrive until its second season. He saw this as an overall analogy for the immigrant experience, which he shared in a Filmmaker Magazine interview:

Later, you know, I started to see a lot of those connections—to immigration itself, and to the stories of the people who came over and planted themselves in the worst soils and started to thrive and grow. But underlying all of that, it’s less the immigration but the heart and sentiments, the relationships of the people doing that. If that makes sense.

Minari also symbolizes the Yi’s story. At the end of Minari, the family is struggling financially and now have no product because their barn burned down, but this fire has basically regenerated the family. In the Minari ending, Jacob and Monica are now working together to get the farm up and running. It’s implied that the Yi family will come back stronger as farmers and as a family. They’ll build something better from the ashes of their original missteps.

Minari Ending: The Poetic Conclusion Explained (4)

Water And Fire In Minari

I only noticed how prevalent fire and, especially, water are in Minari because of the brilliant Bong-Joon-ho pointing it out in his interview with Lee Isaac Chung for Variety. When asked about it, Chung mentioned the biblical idea of two destructions, first with the flood and then with fire. His real memories echoed the tornado warning and his grandmother burning the barn, but he wanted to start Minari with a flood and end it with fire.

The film also has many instances where water causes destruction for the Yi family. First, we see it with the tornado warning, then we see it with Jacob’s crops not being able to get enough water, and even the bath scene between Monica and Jacob has a negative undertone because it’s when Jacob gives her permission to leave him if he can’t make the farm work. And if you want to stretch it further, the pee in grandma’s cup scene and then her peeing on herself after her stroke all tie into water being a source of pain and disaster for the family.

However, water is also used in a positive way in Minari, but only the creek water. The creek water provides the family with water when Jacob has used it all up for his crops. This also ties with the idea of the healing powers of minari, a plant that purifies the creek water.

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How Minari Tells A Story That's Universal

Minari first and foremost is a Korean immigrant story, so Korean Americans and Korean immigrants will connect and understand this story in a way that other Americans cannot, but at the heart of this story is a very American story, a story of wanting to better oneself and family.

This is a story that many can connect to because it’s the story of the American dream. I am a black woman who grew up poor on the Southside of Chicago, and I felt deeply moved and connected to this film because it made me see my parents' struggles in a different way, and that’s one of the remarkable things about Minari. It feels so authentic and deeply personal, but also universal in a way that many can see themselves and their family in one or all of these characters. It speaks to the very human threads of hope, struggles, and perseverance.

Yeri Han summed up in a Korea Times interview how the film resonates with audiences of many different backgrounds.

Not all Koreans have experienced immigration, but Minari will be able to resonate with all of us because it reminds us of our own childhood memories and families. Without forcing emotions on the audience, it gives them the room to step back and see how these characters live their lives and go through growing pains.

Chung has spoken in many interviews, especially in the Reset interview, about creating a personal story that would leave a legacy for his daughter, but he also wanted a story that everyone saw themselves and got out of it different things.

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The Hopeful Nature Of The Minari Ending

The Minari ending shows the Yi family getting good news, first with David’s heart murmur, and then with Jacob finding a grocer, but the second good news is immediately followed by bad news. Monica still wants to leave Jacob, and then all the produce is destroyed.

Despite these tragedies, the family comes out of it stronger than ever. We see David really run for the first time because he’s no longer burdened by the heart murmur and he wants to stop his grandma from leaving. Throughout Minari, he’s been telling his grandma to go, but he’s finally embraced her and wants her around.

We also see the Yi family sleeping on the floor together. At the beginning of the film, the family was completely against this notion, with Anne commenting that Jacob snores. We also see Monica and Paul (Will Patton) with Jacob as he pays to find a new water well, something he was against in the beginning. Monica being around also shows she is now actively supporting Jacob’s dream and participating in the farm dream. We also see Jacob possibly understanding Monica better when she also tries to save the produce. The growing minari also symbolizes hope for the Yi family to thrive in the future.

Minari Ending: The Poetic Conclusion Explained (7)

Jerrica Tisdale

Freelance Writer

Spent most of my life in various parts of Illinois, including attending college in Evanston. I have been a life long lover of pop culture, especially television, turned that passion into writing about all things entertainment related. When I'm not writing about pop culture, I can be found channeling Gordon Ramsay by kicking people out the kitchen.

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Minari Ending: The Poetic Conclusion Explained (2024)

FAQs

Minari Ending: The Poetic Conclusion Explained? ›

The burning shed incident brings Jacob and Monica closer together and strengthens their commitment to each other and their family. The minari plant symbolizes resilience and faith, representing the family's ability to overcome challenges and thrive.

What does the plant symbolize in the minari? ›

The natural rhythm of the minari plant cycle is symbolic of the early struggle Jacob and his family faced in their first attempts at building a farm in Arkansas. After an unsuccessful first run which destroyed their crop, Jacob's business recovers as well as Monica's strength and faith in her family.

Why doesn't David like his grandma minari? ›

David doesn't like her, saying, “Grandma smells like Korea!” and claims she isn't a real grandma because she doesn't cook or bake cookies.

What sets the barn on fire in minari? ›

During their absence, Soon-ja accidentally sets on fire the barn containing the produce. On arriving home, Jacob rushes in to save the crops, followed by Monica. The fire grows out of control, and they save each other, leaving the barn to burn. Distraught and confused, Soon-ja wanders off.

What is the main idea of minari? ›

A Korean American family decides to start over on a farm in Arkansas. Minari is a movie that is very autobiographical in nature, as the director bases it off of his own life and how his family chose to relocate in order to find a better life somewhere else.

What does minari mean in Korean? ›

Minari is the Korean name for water dropwort, water parsley, water celery or pennywort.

What does minari mean in Chinese? ›

Minari has many English names throughout the different Asian countries where it also grows: water dropwort, Chinese celery, Indian pennywort, Japanese parsley. The Korean word itself breaks down into mi, meaning water, and nari, meaning vegetable.

What part of Minari is true? ›

And while it isn't “based on real events,” the people who inspired the family at the center of Minari are very much real. Chung's parents still do, in fact, own a farm in Arkansas. And yet, the Golden Globes classified the movie as a “Foreign Language Film” nominee because it is mostly in Korean.

Why did Lee Isaac Chung make Minari? ›

Minari is based on Chung's childhood move to Arkansas, where his family lived in a trailer on the land on which his father, who emigrated with his mother from their native South Korea, hoped to build a farm.

Is Minari based on a true story? ›

"Minari" is loosely based on Lee Isaac Chung's own experiences growing up. He started writing the screenplay by making a list of every memory he could think of from his childhood.

What happens to the grandma in Minari? ›

As the family's lives improved, Soonja's declined, a voiceover from David reveals. She dies in a nursing home, not long after her grandchildren visit her. Before the film fades to black, viewers are taken back to the clearing in the woods, where the minari continues to grow in abundance on a stream of water.

What is the climax of the story Minari? ›

When all becomes suffocating and Jacob cannot find Monica, he abandons the crops and prioritizes her (symbolically: the family). Thus, in that raging fire, they prioritize each other's goals and their family reconciliation. In this touching climax new beginnings and chances emerge for the family.

How much of Minari is true? ›

However, Chung explains that Minari is "not a factual representation” of his childhood, though he says the film is filled with resonances reflective of his personal history and his family's journey. While a Korean family is at the core of the story, the film achieves universality through its specificity.

How autobiographical is Minari? ›

“Minari” is a semi-autobiographical story based on Chung's own family tale of moving to Arkansas in the 1980s. There are two stories here: the story of the South Korean-born Jacob Yi (Yeun) and his wife, Monica (Han), seeking to build a new life in remote Arkansas.

Is Minari a Oscar winner? ›

Youn's win for her role as matriarch Soonja in Minari, director Lee Isaac Chung's masterful drama about a Korean American family's move to Arkansas in search of the American Dream, marked the first time a Korean actress won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress.

What are the symbolic plants in Korea? ›

South Korea

In Korea, there are the “Four Noble Plants,” which are the Japanese apricot tree, the orchid, chrysanthemum, and bamboo. The apricot tree symbolizes purity, integrity, and longevity.

What does the plant symbolize in Raisin in the Sub? ›

Mama's feeble plant represents her family's deferred dreams for a better future, which have struggled to survive under the strain of life in Chicago's South Side.

What are minari leaves? ›

Minari 미나리 Minari has crisp stems, leafy tops and an herbal flavor. It tastes a little like parsley. It's sold in the vegetable section of Korean grocery stores. Choose minari with plump stems and leaves that are fresh looking and green, not brownish at all.

What is another name for the plant minari? ›

Oenanthe javanica, commonly Java waterdropwort, water celery, water dropwort, Chinese celery, Indian pennywort, minari and Japanese (flat leaf) parsley, is a plant of the genus Oenanthe originating from East Asia.

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