The New York Times has a story on the palpable excitement felt by Korean-American moviegoers — many of them elderly — as they head to an AMC Loews cinema in Ridgefield Park, New Jersey, to watch a Korean-language film on the biggest screen in the cineplex.
The excitement is that they're watching the first-run Korean movie (period piece "Portrait of a Beauty") not in some art house theater but "on a big screen in a proper theater, in the company of others."
A story of Korean cinema "having arrived"? A testament to the increasing multiculturalness of America (or at least Bergen County)? A testament to the increasing acceptability of that multiculturalness?
Having never been to New Jersey (though I have family and friends in or around Fort Lee), I really have no idea (but reporter Kevin Coyne does). But I can guess that the growing Korean-American population there, especially the elderly who always felt their homeland culture would always be on the fringe in America, must feel all warm and fuzzy there in the theater.
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