So I got to watching Elemental over the weekend, and wow. I'm the U.S.-born child of Asian immigrants, and really didn't expect to see a kids movie tell a story that resonated so well with me.
This movie was basically mismarketed as some kind of cross-cultural love story, about a couple that defies the odds to get together despite a society that doesn't approve. And yes, some of that does exist in the movie, but mainly as a plot point about the relationship at the core of the movie, between an immigrant father and his adult daughter, and the decisions he made early on to build a life full of opportunity and potential for her.
I thought the themes were genuinely beautiful:
- The sacrifices made by the older generations, and how the challenge for younger generations of showing appreciation for that sacrifice without necessarily being boxed into the expectations that might derive from that sacrifice.
- The struggle to "belong" when tugged between multiple cultures.
- Prejudice and how it affects people long term, decades after these key moments, and how it manifests in unhealthy and unfair behaviors.
- Different cultural values not just creating conflict, but also providing valuable background for thriving in cross-cultural environments, as well.
I thought it was valuable to have these moments play out in a way that could evoke my own memories of growing up in a diverse city, being raised by parents who loved me but didn't always fully understand the society they'd chosen to raise a family in, little bits of racial or ethnic tension, whether small or large.
My 3-year-old didn't get any of this while watching. But she loved the movie at a superficial level, and I'm hoping when she's older we can have those conversations about these themes and the stories of her grandparents and the family history that brought us where we are today.
And who knows, maybe I'm overstating the primacy of the immigrant story over the love story. It's just that I don't normally get to see depictions on television and film that focus on these themes.
Anyone else get these feelings from watching this movie? Any other television shows or movies evoke similar feelings for you?
I haven't watched Elemental yet because the marketing for it looked like absolute ass. I've heard repeatedly that the marketing did a grave disservice to this movie and now I really do feel like I need to watch it.
I saw something similar happen with Strange New World. The marketing was bad but turns out it may have actually been a Solarpunk type of film, which actually would have been interesting to see.