Hirokazu Kore-eda uses arguably melodramatic plot structures to craft nuanced, delicate character studies. His focus throughout most of his career, but especially lately, has been on stories of unexpected families, and what that word even means. Is family the group into which you’re born or the one who cares for you, raises you, protects you? It’s a theme of Kore-eda’s going back to his masterpiece “Nobody Knows” but it’s also reflected in excellent recent dramas like “Like Father, Like Son,” “After the Storm,” and his Palme d’Or-winning “Shoplifters.” This year, he has quietly delivered the seemingly underrated “Broker,” opening in limited release next week before expanding in early 2023. In a crowded Cannes slate this year, “Broker” slipped under the radar, and it deserves a much bigger audience. This is a moving drama about people pushed together by fate who end up not merely helping each other survive but elevate through an increasingly harsh world.
Kore-eda traveled to South Korea to tell this story, in part because of how that country more commonly uses something called “baby boxes.” But one suspects it’s also so he could work with the amazing Song Kang-ho (“Parasite”), who won Best Actor at Cannes. Song plays Ha Sang-hyeon, the owner of a laundry shop who volunteers at a local church. That’s where he works an unusual scheme with his friend Dong-soo (Gang Dong-won) as the two take the infants dropped off by mothers who cannot care for them. The pair sell the babies on the adoption market. Yes, “Broker” is a dramedy about child trafficking, but Kore-eda instantly wants you to question your judgment of his characters. Is it that much better for a baby to enter the Korean foster system than to be sold to a family who will love and care for it? “Broker” doesn’t directly address this question as much as let it hang in their air, reflecting how we will judge the characters moving forward.
Everything falls apart when a mother named Moon So-young (the phenomenal Lee-Ji-eun) returns to the church to get her baby back, stumbling onto the operation. At the same time, a pair of detectives named Soo-jin (Bae Doona) and Detective Lee (Lee Joo-young) are following this new crew of outsiders, discovering that not everything is as it seems.
“Broker” shouldn’t work. In plot description alone, it sounds kind of ridiculous and almost insulting. And if one can’t get past its contrivances, especially in the final act, it won’t connect. However, I find it so refreshing when a filmmaker can use an old-fashioned melodramatic structure to emotionally connect. Kore-eda’s films, and this one in particular, are perfect examples of what Roger Ebert was getting at when he wrote of film as an empathy machine. They’re not just asking you to walk in someone else’s shoes but they’re demands for empathy for people that you see every day. They’re requests for empathy not just for the people on the screen, but for the makeshift families that you have been surrounded by. He uses melodrama not merely to manipulate his audience but to shift your emotional center, and to push away the cynicism and judgment of the world. He presents his characters with such compassion and understanding that we come to love them too. “This car is filled with liars,” says Dong-soo, and he’s not wrong, but how did they get to this point? Why have they lied? What does it say about where they’ve been and where they’re going?
It helps that Kore-eda’s hand with performance direction has only gotten better. Song is as good as one would expect—he’s literally never bad—but he’s not alone. Lee Ji-eun is the revelation, conveying how much character has been thrust into a situation she never could have imagined without feeling like a pawn of the plot. She’s really the heart of the story in that it’s how her character turns from a young woman with no options to someone who finds her own path through life. Kore-eda allows his emotion to build through his characters, and his ensemble gets that. If we don’t believe the choices they’re making or their emotions, the whole project falls apart.
HIrokazu Kore-eda understands that unimaginable life decisions aren’t made easily. They’re often made by people who have reached a fork in the road where neither direction felt like the right one. We’re all stumbling through life at certain points. And it’s the people we meet on the way, the ones who end up joining us, that keep us moving.
Opens in NYC on 12/26 and LA on 12/28.
Broker (2022)
129 minutes
Cast
Song Kang-Hoas Sang-hyun
Gang Dong-wonas Dong-soo
Bae Doonaas Su-jin
IUas So-young
Lee Joo-youngas Detective Lee
Park Ji-yongas Woo-sung
Lim Seung-sooas Hae-jin
Lee Mu-saengas Seon-ho
Director
- Hirokazu Kore-eda
Writer
- Hirokazu Kore-eda
Cinematographer
- Hong Kyung-pyo
Editor
- Hirokazu Kore-eda
Composer
- Jung Jae-il