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How Mickey 17 Values (and Devalues) Human Life

South Korean filmmakers are having a big moment right now. The first season of Squid Game was the most-watched Netflix show of all time, and the second season of Squid Game broke multiple viewership records for the platform. South Korean filmmaker Bong Joon-ho made Oscar history by directing the first foreign language film to win Best Picture, Parasite, and he won many film fans years earlier with his 2013 English-language sci-fi Snowpiercer. Meanwhile, other South Korean films have become cult classics on streaming, from Train to Busan to Burning.

It’s not surprising that these movies and shows have so much cross-cultural appeal. Most of them are thrillers or sci-fi films that deal with anti-establishment and “eat the rich” themes, which have become very popular in Hollywood—including Get Out, Glass Onion, White Lotus, The Menu, Joker, and Severance. On a cultural level, South Korea shares many of the same trends as America—including growing income inequality, falling fertility rates, and growing political gender divides—and therefore many of the same cultural anxieties.

Bong’s latest English-language film, Mickey 17, is a good example of the strengths and weaknesses of these kinds of films. Mickey 17 takes place on a future Earth where the unlucky Mickey Barnes (Robert Pattinson) escapes his debt collectors by signing up to be an “expendable” on a ship leaving Earth to start a new colony. This means he will get sent on suicide missions and then be “reprinted” (i.e. cloned) to do so again and again. But things go sideways when Mickey 17, who was supposed to die, survives and must contend with Mickey 18. To stay alive, both Mickeys have to team up with their girlfriend Nasha (Naomi Ackie) to take down the would-be dictator Kenneth Marshall (Mark Ruffalo) and his wife Gwen (Toni Collette).

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