A Nest in My Heart A Nest in My Heart Directed by: Mira Kim is a deeply personal human drama of South Korea that confronts the distance between who we are today and the child we once were. In present-day South Korea, an elderly woman stands inside her daughter’s luxurious apartment. The pristine bathroom—symbol of modern prosperity—unexpectedly opens a passage to her earliest memory. She becomes again a five-year-old girl growing up in a 1960s hillside slum, raised by her grandmother amid hunger, superstition, faith, and communal life. Through the child’s gaze, the film recalls a world where survival depended not on wealth, but on human bonds: a piece of bread shared after prayer, neighbors bound by ritual and rumor, and a grandmother whose arms became the final barrier between life and death. A near-fatal childhood accident crystallizes the film’s emotional core—revealing love as both refuge and destiny. Moving fluidly between past and present, realism and gentle fantasy, asks a quiet but urgent question: In a world that has grown richer, what have we forgotten? This film is not only a recollection of poverty, but a tribute to the invisible nest of love that sustains life, long after childhood has ended.