Jongsu rencontre par hasard Haemi, une ancienne camarade de classe, qui lui demande de s'occuper de son chat pendant son voyage en Afrique. À son retour, elle lui présente Ben, un homme myst... Tout lireJongsu rencontre par hasard Haemi, une ancienne camarade de classe, qui lui demande de s'occuper de son chat pendant son voyage en Afrique. À son retour, elle lui présente Ben, un homme mystérieux qu'elle a rencontré là-bas.Jongsu rencontre par hasard Haemi, une ancienne camarade de classe, qui lui demande de s'occuper de son chat pendant son voyage en Afrique. À son retour, elle lui présente Ben, un homme mystérieux qu'elle a rencontré là-bas.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 54 victoires et 144 nominations au total
- Lawyer
- (as Sung-Keun Moon)
- Ben's home security guard
- (as Yong-joon Jo)
- Self
- (images d'archives)
- (non crédité)
Avis à la une
One way to go about this is for the filmmaker to trick the viewer when in internal mode to make assumptions that are later revealed to shock. A common technique is to tantalize with some erotic vision - easily cinematic - and later lead us into reviling misogynistic exploitive behaviour.
More nuanced is mixing realities between what we invent from what we are shown and what an on-screen sometime narrator does. This is rich territory for filmmakers willing to go there, and I think the more we experiment, the greater our vocabulary will be.
We are tuned to have an in-story interpreter. Our main character is a writer, and we are pointed to some books with metaphors that cross into reality.
We see him in the longish first act conjure narrative reality from sexual fantasy. Later, he literally writes what we presumably see, while sitting in the girl's apartment but outfitted for himself. The sexual tryst is still in the smell of the place.
We see his love interest go well out of our way to present the importance of (pantomime) living richly in a created reality. We have her describe the 'great hunger' for revelation, encountered in dance she describes and later demonstrates, in her own encounter in Africa - a trip likely never taken.
We have questionable memories. Is she genuinely the person who lived in the neighborhood when they were children? Is the father overcome by past roles he cannot escape? Is the newly recovered mother genuine? What role does plastic surgery play, once we see the 'makeup' scene at the narratively frugal end?
The referenced Gatsby story to those of us interested in these things, is rich with mixed fantasies from the writer and narrator. All the real action here is in the context of broadcast propaganda; the MacGuffins are neglected glass houses in a context where houses matter, and may even (dimly) reference quantum realities.
We never know who is conspiring with whom, who is imaginary and what motives are to be trusted.
So the art here is in transporting us into this folded space where we get destabilized, but not so much we lose our engagement. That's a major accomplishment in itself. Few can do it and most are Asian.
But we want the investment to matter. I want a part of my soul turned inside out to challenge me by the evoked inner me. Possibly, this failure is because I did not pretend to fall in love with the girl. The seduction did not overlap beyond the two young men, possibly because of culture, age and suspicion.
Burning as childhood trauma (Jong-su forced by his father to incinerate his mother's clothes as a child), burning as a desire to know the meaning of life, or to have never existed at all (Hae-mi's memories of the Great Hunger dance in front of a bonfire in Africa, and the blazing sunset), and burning as sheer nihilistic sociopathy (Ben torching greenhouses for kicks, and that's of course not all he's up to). Three indelible characters, three brilliant performances.
The class distinctions are a little sharp between characters that live on a farm near the North Korean border, in a cramped apartment in the shadow of Seoul Tower, and in a luxurious suite in Gangnam, but serve to pose an underlying, smoldering question - how can we make sense of a world where a college graduate can't get a job that isn't dehumanizing, while the entitled rich blithely toy with people's lives without a care in the world? A masterpiece from Lee Chang-dong.
At two and a half hours, the film is perhaps too long especially as the first half begins to get dull at a certain point. This thankfully changes when the story and its energy get very mysterious. Here is where the film earns many points for its uniqueness and its subtle ways to lure the viewer into its web. In a good way, this segment is rarely frightening but always intriguing. Also, class difference plays a major role but without being obviously so.
The audience is teased overall with only a minimal amount of information - just enough to understand while still yearning for more by the end. While a bit more information might have raised the film overall, it's still fair to say that the tease pays off for the most part. - dbamateurcritic
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe scene in which the main characters talk at Jong-su's house was filmed over a month. They were only able to shoot for a few minutes every day to capture consistent twilight on camera.
- Citations
Shin Hae-mi: Do you know Bushmen in the Kalahari Desert, Africa It is said that Bushmen have two types of hungry people. Hungry English is hunger, Little hungry and great hungry. Little hungry people are physically hungry, The great hungry is a person who is hungry for survival. Why do we live, What is the significance of living? People who are always looking for these answers. This kind of person is really hungry, They called the great hungry.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Do-ol-Ah-in O-bang-gan-da: We Are All Special Beings (2019)
- Bandes originalesGénérique
Written by Miles Davis (uncredited)
Performed by Miles Davis
Courtesy of Warner/Chappell Music France
Played during the dance scene with a background of a sunset
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Burning?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
Box-office
- Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 718 991 $US
- Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
- 26 130 $US
- 28 oct. 2018
- Montant brut mondial
- 7 578 063 $US
- Durée2 heures 28 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1