At just 83 minutes long, Kim’s Convenience may be short, and set entirely in a small corner store, but it embraces the big stuff: family, regret, forgiveness, the need for belonging. Ultimately, it asks: What is the story of a life? Is it the work we do, the things we accumulate, or the other lives we touch along the way?

Appa (Ins Choi) runs a convenience store, where toiletries and “Canada” T-shirts share space with Korean flags in a rapidly gentrifying neighborhood in Toronto. When he’s not launching into tirades about the history of Korea, he bluntly roasts customers and pressures his adult daughter Janet (Kelly Seo) to successfully live up to his high immigrant-parent expectations. (Years prior, his son Jung (Ryan Jinn) chafed under his pressure, cut all ties after a violent fight,

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