Genre: Drama
Director: Lee Chang-dong
Cast: Jeon Do-yeon Jeon, Song Kang-ho, Jo
Yeong-jin, Kim Yeong-jae, Park Myeong-sin
Runtime: 2 hrs 22 mins
Released By: Cathay-Keris Films
Rating: TBA
Official Website: http://www.secretsunshine.co.kr/fla/index.html
Opening Day: 13 March 2008 at THE PICTUREHOUSE
Synopsis:
When her husband passes away in an automobile accident, Shin-ae
and her son Jun relocate down south to her late husband’s
hometown of Miryang. Despite her efforts to settle down in
this unfamiliar but much too normal place, she finds that
she can’t quite fit in. Helping her out is Kim, a good-intentioned
but bothersome bachelor, who owns a car repair shop. Life
plods on. However, fate takes a vicious turn when Shin-ae
loses her son in the most horrific way a mother could imagine.
She turns to Christianity to relieve the pain in her heart,
but when even this is not permitted, she wages a war against
God.
Movie Review:
Lee Chang-dong’s exceptional “Secret Sunshine”
is the single most emotionally ravaging experience of the
year. It is an instantly sobering, brutally honest character
piece on the reverberations of loss and a graceful memento
mori that resonates with a striking density of thought, yet
remains as inscrutable as the emotions it observes. Through
its layered naturalism and stunningly trenchant view of small-town
dynamics, Lee implicitly deconstructs the traditional Korean
melodrama by pulling apart the cinematics of excess and ripping
to shreds the arcs that shape its characters and grounds the
proceedings into a crushing grind of stoic realism.
“Secret
Sunshine” remains an immensely compelling, fluid work
throughout its 142-minute runtime. Its bravura first hour
is filled to the brim with subtextual insinuations, remarkable
foreshadowing and adroit reversals of tone brought about by
humanistic capriciousness. Adapted from a short story, Lee
infuses the film with his sensitivity for the sublime paradoxes
of life, last seen in his transgressively comic and irreverent
“Oasis”. Understanding how personal revolutions
are forged when views of our universe are changed, Lee not
only sees the emotional cataclysm of a widow’s sorrow
through an inquiring scope but also feels the tumultuous existential
currents that underpin the film when religion becomes a narrative
scapegoat in comprehending the heinousness of the human experience.
Do-yeon
Jeon’s (“You
Are My Sunshine”) Best Actress accolade at Cannes
in 2007 is well deserved. Her performance as the widow Shin-ae
remains an unrelenting enigma. As a character pulled apart
by forces beyond her control, the sheer magnificence of this
performance is central to the film’s turbulent nature.
With Jeon essaying one cyclonic upheaval after another, there’s
a tremulous sense of collapse that the film, to its credit,
never approaches. Instead it finds a delicate balance that
saps the charged theatricality and subsequent banality from
ordinary tragedies and its fallouts. She becomes the centre
of the film’s universe as well as ours. Filmed in glorious
handheld CinemaScope, the film demolishes the cinematicism
of frames and compositions by becoming visually acute just
as it is quietly harrowing when the camera never relinquishes
its gaze from Shin-ae through times of happiness, guilt and
remorse.
Lee
captures the details of life in the small, suspicious town
of Miryang – the awkwardness of communal situations,
its uncomfortable silences and its devastations spun out of
personal dramas. Shin-ae’s interactions with the townsfolk
rarely inspires dividends, especially when they are merely
done out of obligation to fit in for the sake of her son,
Jun (Seon Jung-yeop). The one recurring acquaintance is Jong-chan
(Song Kang-ho), a bachelor mechanic of uncertain intentions
who helps her en route to Miryang in the film’s enchanting
open sequence set to a captivating stream of sunlight. Song
has situated himself as a comedic anti-hero in South Korea’s
biggest films but his nuanced, low-key delivery here purports
the director’s thought process of never having to reveal
more than plainly necessary.
If
pain is ephemeral, then grief can never truly dissipate. And
Lee finds complexity in subsistence. When Shin-ae attempts
to head down the path of reconciliation only to be faced again
with unimaginable heartbreak, she unsuccessfully employs the
fellowship of evangelical Christianity as a foil to her sorrow.
But Lee knows better than that when he understands that religion,
in the context of the human canvas of strife and misery, is
never a simple solution. But Lee never rebukes the essence
of religion as he realises the value of salvation for some
through a higher power even if it serves a form of denial
in others. The scenes in its latter half which deal with religion
doesn’t allow itself to become aggressively scornful,
which is a feat in itself considering how many filmmakers
let the momentum of the material take over from what they
need to say to be true to its story and characters.
Lee’s
first film since his call to office as his country’s
Minister of Culture and Tourism is an uncompromising dissertation
on human suffering. In a film so artless and genuine, it arduously
reveals that there's nothing as simple as emotional catharsis,
just the suppression and abatement of agony. “Secret
Sunshine” leaves us with tender mercies pulled out of
evanescence, and points towards a profound understanding of
despair and faith.
Movie
Rating:
(Powerful and challenging, the best film of the year thus
far)
Review by Justin Deimen
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