I had the privilege of seeing Between Goodbyes at the Chicago International Film Festival in Fall 2024.
I'm a Korean adoptee and have seen a handful of documentaries about adoption and adoptees in reunion with their families. Between Goodbyes stuck out to me because it shares perspectives from the protagonist's Korean family-a side of the adoption story that we don't often have access to.
I appreciate this feature-length film because it shares background information on Korean adoption, which can help provide context for those who may not know anything about it, and it also showed me things I'd never seen before, namely archival Korean news footage that gave me a glimpse into Korean society in the 1980s when I was born.
This film hits on many levels, but one thing I think important to note is the representation of a queer story. The stigma of being queer in Korea is still quite strong, and I believe that films like Between Goodbyes can help build soft power to encourage Koreans to move toward acceptance and celebration of people who choose to love whom they love.
And though the film is a documentary, I really loved the more creative/fantasy-like elements that the filmmaker chose to incorporate to help the viewer tap into the emotional world that they were guiding us through.
Much appreciation for those who decided to share the most personal story in a public form; for me, this film provides an opportunity to heal, and I hope it does the same for them as well.