Learning Korean is definitely in my bucket list. I absolutely love kdramas/kmovies. Lots of love from India. โค๏ธ
@oneshoe72able3 ะถัะป ะฑาฑััะฝ
Good luck. ๐ค
@a_sm983 ะถัะป ะฑาฑััะฝ
Lucky explained what's the message driven from this movie white tiger, the scene do poverty. Till what extent these things are true in daily life. Grandma being the head of the family carrying the keys which is passed down through generation, the scenario of NRI in India, how gp India perceive them, and how Lucky considers himself as the character of Ashok in the movie. The 4 level caste system. The symbolism of Rooster and White tiger in cage. The most vulnerable ones like roosters dream to be like the rare white tiger but their fate is always to be in the cage. The movie is loved by many Koreans and they seem to decipher the meaning of life behind it.
@whatsup70643 ะถัะป ะฑาฑััะฝ
they are quite racist. not all, but some
@beethovenkim83173 ะถัะป ะฑาฑััะฝ
@@whatsup7064 But I'm not, I understand what you said. They are not as much as Japanese.
@figlotus41293 ะถัะป ะฑาฑััะฝ
@@beethovenkim8317 You don't need to bring in the comparison with the Japanese. Unless you are a minority in society, you'd never realise how severe and widespread racism is. For instance, say, some Indians claim there is no racism in their country and they are very welcoming to foreigners. But when you type in travels in India on YT, there'd be a lot of videos cropping up where Koreans share their experiences of racism in India. It is also true whether it is in Germany or in Canada. If you are part of the majority, you are bound to be blind to what minorities experience on the daily basis; you might feel that your country is less racist than others. But one racist instance is still racist, and, whether verbal or physical, it still hurts the same.