Bao-ufstq Here
: In a moment of desperation to keep him from leaving home, the mother eats the little bun in a fit of grief-driven rage.
The film is a wordless, eight-minute story that uses food as a metaphor for the complex relationship between an immigrant mother and her child. bao-ufstq
: The story shifts from the "fairytale" to reality. The mother is lying in bed, grieving. Her actual human son (who looks exactly like the adult bun) enters the room. It is revealed that the "bun" was a mental manifestation of her struggle to let go of her son as he grew up and moved away. : In a moment of desperation to keep
: Domee Shi based the story on her own life as an only child. Her mother would often say, "I wish I could put you back in my stomach so I knew where you were at all times". The mother is lying in bed, grieving
: An aging Chinese-Canadian woman, feeling the loneliness of an "empty nest," is making steamed buns (baozi) for her husband. To her shock, one of the buns comes to life—growing tiny arms and legs and letting out a baby's cry.