Bao-ufstq
: It highlights the experience of first- and second-generation Chinese immigrant households, specifically the "over-protective" love common in many Asian cultures.
: The film captures the specific grief parents feel when their children leave home. bao-ufstq
: The woman joyfully "adopts" the bun. She treats it like her own son: feeding it, measuring its height against the wall, and taking it to the park. She is intensely protective, shielding it from any harm that might cause it to squash or tear. : It highlights the experience of first- and
: 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. She treats it like her own son: feeding
💡 : The film won the Oscar for Best Animated Short Film at the 91st Academy Awards and was the first Pixar short directed by a woman.




