Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA story of two 13-year-old boys in a small country village during the last days of the Korean War. Sungmin's father gets a job at US army camp through his daughter's American boyfriend, and ... Tout lireA story of two 13-year-old boys in a small country village during the last days of the Korean War. Sungmin's father gets a job at US army camp through his daughter's American boyfriend, and the family gets richer. But Changhee's father has been long-lost and his mother can't even... Tout lireA story of two 13-year-old boys in a small country village during the last days of the Korean War. Sungmin's father gets a job at US army camp through his daughter's American boyfriend, and the family gets richer. But Changhee's father has been long-lost and his mother can't even afford one meal a day for her children. One day, the boys peep into a deserted mill-house... Tout lire
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 20 victoires et 10 nominations au total
- Sung-min's father
- (as Sung-kee Ahn)
- Sung-min's uncle
- (as Ohsung Yoo)
- Chang-hee
- (as Jungwoo Kim)
- Chun-Daek Lee
- (as Namhee Kwon)
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But one thing about this movie that IS painfully obvious is its ridiculous anti-American sentiments. As an American, I'm well aware of my country's participation in the Korean War, and I'm very well aware that we weren't always angels, but I'll be damn if I'll take this guy's version of how things happened. According to this blind fool, Americans were not only at the root of the war, we were the CAUSE of the war, and we almost singlehandedly destroyed the country. Whatever, Mister Director. And I suppose you'd still be making this film in COMMUNIST KOREA if we hadn't interfered, right? Talk about forgetting your history. This is almost akin to making the Nazis the "good guys" while turning the Allied forces into the "bad guys." This movie is so historically naive and so factually inaccurate that it's almost embarrassing to watch. For a man who comes from a country that owes its very EXISTENCE to American interference, he sure comes off as high and mighty and judgemental.
Set in Korea in the early 1950's, family members find tragedy when a small village boy witnesses his mother having sex with an American soldier.
Korean movies are rarely seen in the USA. I gave this film every chance, however with few exceptions most every shot is overly distant from the actors. The pacing becomes slower as the framing becomes wider.
Kept away at a distance, it is nearly impossible for the viewer to care about the people in the movie.
Spring in My Hometown is highly ranked. The shadowed subtitling was very easy to read. Check it out if you find it, but don't plan on being overly enthralled.
Except for the opening scene, almost all of the violence and atrocities are off screen, one observes, for example, the expressions on the faces of children turning from inquisitive curiosity to nauseous horror, but not the act that they witness itself. The war, as such, is never shown, but only referred to in title screens reporting some of the most significant events. We see a funeral, but not the killing. To me, this is a very interesting (and in a time where most films rub your nose in graphic and excessive violence, also unusual) technique, because it allows the film to make its point without having to depict what it is actually condemning.
Admittedly this technique, of only indirectly, or not at all, showing the cardinal incidents, and the overall tendency to view events from a distance (where you can't really recognize characters) made the film very difficult to follow. However once one constructs the sequence of events from the consequences that are shown, the effect is all the more compelling.
It doesn't pull its punches when it comes to story. Impoverished widowed Corean women resort to selling their bodies to US soldiers for money to feed their families. Some Coreans take advantage of the US presence to gain employment. People die at each others' and at US military hands.
The directing style however is very restrained, shooting primarily from a fixed camera at a distance. Therefore, it creates a distance for the viewer, which may make it immediately difficult to connect to the story. But I don't think it's a terrible technique, because, in some ways, the technique renders us helpless as viewers and helps further the case for the film to be in a the past and observational, rather than intimate. Yet, because of the nature of the story, it's still easy to become connected with the characters, especially the protagonist, a young boy.
All in all, I'd say this is a solid effort of an art film. It's certainly not a happy or uplifting film, but a brooding meditation on the crimes of the past, both from within and from outside the Corean people. And like a lot of Corean works, the theme of continuing on despite suffering is present as well.
It's good. 8/10.
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Spring in My Hometown
- Lieux de tournage
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée2 heures
- Couleur