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Film Analysis on "Okja" (IB Film Textual Analysis : 7/7-example)

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This IB Film HL analysis examines the “Mirando Parade” scene in Okja (2017), exploring how cinematography, mise-en-scène, costume, and color reveal corporate greed and animal exploitation. Using detailed scene breakdowns and real-world parallels, it demonstrates how Bong critiques the meat industry. This Level 7/7 essay is a useful resource for students learning film analysis and IB Film techniques.

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Senior / 12th grade
Course
Film production
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Uploaded on
August 27, 2025
Number of pages
11
Written in
2025/2026
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Film Textual Analysis
Okja – “Mirando Parade” Scene




Film: Okja (2017)
Director: Bong Joon-ho
Minutes: 1:27:39 – 1:32:39
Word count: 1730

, Textual Analysis
Okja – “Mirando Parade” Scene


In the 2017 South Korean film Okja, director Bong Joon-ho delves into the complex interplay
between capitalism, corporate greed, and the ethical treatment of animals. On a surface level,
Okja is simply an innocent story about the friendship between a girl and her pet pig. The story
follows Mija, a young girl from the outskirts of South Korea, setting out to New York to rescue
her genetically modified “superpig” best friend, Okja, from the Mirando Corporation, the
multinational corporation that attempts to commercialize the superpigs. But beyond the film’s
cartoonish bent the narrative may initially suggest with its giant CGI pig and eccentric
characters, there is nothing about Okja that’s simple. The film reflects a universally relevant
message about the exploitation of nature and the ethical dilemmas associated with it, thus
illuminating themes of corporate power.


Living in a world of consumerism and corporate greed, Okja is an allegory of the meat
industry—or the food industry at large. In real life, many meat production companies operate
similarly to the Mirando Corporation in the film. For example, Smithfields Foods, America’s
largest pork producer, presents itself as a socially responsible steward of animal welfare.
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