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Go-yang-i-leul boo-tak-hae

  • 2001
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 52min
NOTE IMDb
7,1/10
2,7 k
MA NOTE
Bae Doona, Lee Yo-won, and Ok Ji-young in Go-yang-i-leul boo-tak-hae (2001)
Take Care Of My Cat(2001)
Lire trailer2:21
1 Video
36 photos
Drama

Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueIn the port city of Icheon, five female friends struggle to stay close while forging a life for themselves after high school. When one of the group, upwardly-mobile Hae-ju, moves to Seoul, t... Tout lireIn the port city of Icheon, five female friends struggle to stay close while forging a life for themselves after high school. When one of the group, upwardly-mobile Hae-ju, moves to Seoul, the other girls deal with the loss in different ways. Feeling most rejected, shy Ji-yeong f... Tout lireIn the port city of Icheon, five female friends struggle to stay close while forging a life for themselves after high school. When one of the group, upwardly-mobile Hae-ju, moves to Seoul, the other girls deal with the loss in different ways. Feeling most rejected, shy Ji-yeong finds comfort in her new friendship with rebel Tae-hee.

  • Réalisation
    • Jae-eun Jeong
  • Scénario
    • Jae-eun Jeong
    • Hyeon-jeong Kim
    • Lee Eon-hie
  • Casting principal
    • Bae Doona
    • Lee Yo-won
    • Ok Ji-young
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    7,1/10
    2,7 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • Jae-eun Jeong
    • Scénario
      • Jae-eun Jeong
      • Hyeon-jeong Kim
      • Lee Eon-hie
    • Casting principal
      • Bae Doona
      • Lee Yo-won
      • Ok Ji-young
    • 31avis d'utilisateurs
    • 36avis des critiques
    • 69Métascore
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
    • Récompenses
      • 11 victoires et 6 nominations au total

    Vidéos1

    Main trailer
    Trailer 2:21
    Main trailer

    Photos36

    Voir l'affiche
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    + 29
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    Rôles principaux17

    Modifier
    Bae Doona
    Bae Doona
    • Tae-hie
    Lee Yo-won
    Lee Yo-won
    • Hye-ju
    • (as Yo-won Lee)
    Ok Ji-young
    Ok Ji-young
    • Ji-young
    • (as Ji-young Ok)
    Eung-ju Lee
    • Bi-ryu
    Eung-sil Lee
    • Bi-ryu
    Oh Tae-kyung
    • Uhm Chan-yong
    • (as Tae-kyung Oh)
    Sang Seol Choi
    • Tae-hie's father
    Park Sung-Geun
    • Deputy Park
    Moon Jeong-Hee
    Moon Jeong-Hee
    • Team leader
    Hwang Seok-jeong
    Hwang Seok-jeong
    • Passbook Lady…
    Park Rina
    • Hye-ju's elder sister
    Kim Hwa-yeong
    Kim Hwa-yeong
    • Tae-hie's mother
    Park Jin-young
    Park Jin-young
    • Brokerage employee
    Su-hyeon Kim
    • Brokerage Firm Employee
    Tae-yeong Kim
    • Securities Company Employee
    Kim Kwang-kyu
    Kim Kwang-kyu
    • Ticket Inspector
    Yoo Soon-cheol
    • Fresh Grandfather
    • (as Soon-cheol Yoo)
    • Réalisation
      • Jae-eun Jeong
    • Scénario
      • Jae-eun Jeong
      • Hyeon-jeong Kim
      • Lee Eon-hie
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs31

    7,12.6K
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    Avis à la une

    Thatchen

    Real

    This was a very insightful movie, as far as the tensions that might come between old friends, and the hardships that come with growing up. The plot is a little slow moving, but then, so is life. It may seem like the story goes nowhere, but really there's a very profound ending, even though you won't spot it if you're looking for a movie with all the cliché storyline signs: Villain, some horribly horrible task befalling the main character, and at the end everyone saves the day. It's not an action movie, and it's not about superheros~ It's about life, and so the movie moves and looks and feels the way *real* life does.
    9howard.schumann

    A perceptive coming of age film that avoids genre clichés

    33-year old director Jae-eun Jeong's Take Care of my Cat is a perceptive coming of age film about five young Korean women trying to cope with the transition from high school to the adult world. Though a bit overlong and somewhat disjointed, it is an honest work that avoids genre clichés of sex, drugs, and even boyfriends. The film received a major award at the Rotterdam Film Festival in 2002, but did not gain proper recognition until its DVD release this year. The title refers to a stray kitten, Tee tee, which is passed between the five girls and, as circumstances pull their lives apart, serves as a connection between them. Set in the City of Inchon, the bleak working-class environment establishes the mood of the film. According to the director, "Inchon is a city with many immigrants who came during the war or in the 70s during industrialization. It is a city full of wanderers that matched my characters who were outsiders."

    The girls are in constant movement. Whirling through the city on subways and buses between work, clubs, and restaurants, we get a sense of their optimism and energy. Programmed to play entire melodies, their cellphones ring constantly as the girls coordinate their meetings and activities. In a clever gimmick, the director floats the text messages on the screen, in bus windows, and building walls. While it took me a while to get to know each character, each one has a strong and distinctive personality and, by the end, I felt a part of their lives. Hae-joo (Yo-won Lee) is the most outgoing and self confident but can be self-absorbed and insensitive to others. Through connections made by her affluent family, she lands a job as an assistant in a brokerage firm.

    Although aware of the fact that she is a "low-wage" earner without much of a future at the company, she becomes fashion-conscious, carries a Louis Vuitton bag, and is acutely conscious of her appearance, spending money on laser surgery for her eyes. When she moves to Seoul to advance her career, it further strains the relationship with the others. Ji-young (Ji-young OK) is the opposite, a soft-spoken, sensitive young woman who lives in the poorest section of town with her grandparents in a run-down shack and cannot find a good job. She lacks the means to develop her considerable potential as a designer artist and is prone to moods of sadness and withdrawal. Tae-hee, in an outstanding performance by Doo-na Bae, is the glue that holds the friendships together by arranging meetings and bringing people together.

    Tae-hee works for her father in his traditional "hot-rock" healing spa and, in her spare time, types for a poet afflicted with cerebral palsy who has developed strong feelings for her. Twins Bi-ryu (Eun-shil Lee) and Ohn-jo (Eun-joo Lee) play minor roles as they try to scrape together a living hawking jewelry on the street but their characters seem included more for comic relief than to further the plot. The girl's world seems strange to the older generations but the harsh reality of survival is constant, their ambitions often at odds with the male-dominated society. Ji-young wants to be a textile designer but is unable to go to school, Hae-joo wants a respectable job in the business world, and Tae-hee dreams of escaping from the suffocating restrictions of her family, though recognizing that running away is "so tacky".

    She comes into open conflict with her family in a restaurant when her traditional father, rather than admitting he can't read the menu, orders the most popular dish for everyone. Tension arises between Hae-joo and Ji-young when Hae-joo invites everyone to go on a shopping spree even though she knows that Ji-young may feel left out. Tae-hee is the most supportive and is there for Ji-young when tragedy strikes, willing to do whatever is necessary to support her. Take Care of my Cat has no peak dramatic moments, no plot contrivances that propel us toward certain emotional responses, only the sad undercurrent of the inevitability of change in a confusing world. Backed by the moody electronic sound track by Kim Jin-cheol and Byul, I found Take Care of my Cat to be a moving experience. Jae-eun Jeong does not provide easy answers as to the direction the girls will take, but, by avoiding cynicism, she allows us to see their life in terms of possibility.
    bob the moo

    Interesting coming of age story with a few good performances and good direction from Jeong but weak in several important areas to the film's overall detriment

    A group of female school friends find their lives change when they all are out of education and either in jobs or looking for work. After coming together for a birthday party the friends start to drift apart. Hae-Joo heads to Seoul to take a job that quickly starts to take over her life while her other friends, feeling abandoned and separated are left to take stock of their relationships and lives. As the group starts to drift apart, Tae-Hee and Ji-Young start to become closer than they were and try to plan out their lives.

    When a film is subtitled from a foreign language it is easy to praise it for being excellent when really it is just 'good'; likewise it is easy to want to see a film because of the country of origin and not on the merits of the film itself. Finally it is easy to forgive a foreign film for weaknesses or standards that we would frown upon in an American film. I don't know quite why this is – maybe because so few people see these films or it is hard to see them so we want to sound cine-literate and intelligent by seeing 'a great little foreign film', and maybe we blind ourselves to it a little – I know I do it, I loved Swiri when really it was just an enjoyable American-style action movie, nothing more. So with this film, I didn't sit to watch it because of the story but mainly because it was from South Korea and I have seen several from this country recently and liked them.

    The IMDb reviews for this film generally fall into the trap of forgiving a film for things that you wouldn't forgive an American film for and, as such, are quite gushing on the whole. This is not to say that it is no good, but rather than it is only 'good' and not some wondrous piece of art! The plot is fairly loose and is more character driven than anything else and, in this way, it suits the style and tone that the film sets out very early on. The freewheeling film would have been better if the film had hit a more realistic and engaging script. The characters are OK but not all of the five or so main characters are easy to get to know – I ended up finding Tae-Hee easiest to care about and Hae-Joo the easiest to understand (mainly because her low-paid, hard-worked administrator is universally recognisable). The characters are still interesting and make for an OK tale about the difficult stage where school friends drift, the workplace takes over the majority of your hours and you find you life changing, but it is no more than good for the majority.

    The script could have been much sharper and the characters much better written and this would have been a much better film as a result. At this point I will admit that perhaps I didn't get a lot of it due to not being aware of the culture that the characters were in but, to be honest, I think the story is fairly applicable across cultures with only maybe the influence of parental pressures having greater importance. The way the story heads in the final third also betrays what started as a pretty realistic picture of the life of the twenty year olds by going places that seem to have been done in the name of creating more narrative and dramatic flow. The script does manage to convey the chatter and general hustle-bustle of city life, with the use of text messaging, mobile phones and ring tones well done in capturing those still young enough to enjoy the world of pop ring tones while also finding themselves with the income to waste on them!

    The cast mostly do well but the lion's share of the film is given to three actresses. Yu-won Lee is good but the script paints her a too-simple character in Hae-Joo and she is left to deliver the obvious rather than the insightful. As the heart of the group (or at least the story) Du-na Bae is likable and does well with conveying her mix of sadness, loss, hope and happiness. OK is unconvincing as Ji-young and is too difficult to get inside as a character. The Lee twins are used just as twins and have no meat on their characters at all – the film lets them drift in and out of view so easily that I wondered why it hadn't gone for a scaled down story and made it about 3 friends instead of 5. Director Jeong makes the film look and feel very interesting, with nice use of split screens and a clever display of text messages etc. Her collection of award winning shorts shows she has talent in this area but, like many directors of shorts, the step up to features has seen problems exposed that a short film, by their very nature, would conceal. The title and end credits are imaginative and enjoyable (even if the style at the end makes it hard to read any names – maybe bothering those that worked on it but not me, since they were all in Korean).

    If my review sounds overly negative maybe I am accidentally overcompensating for the praise it has had from others. I did like the film but I must admit that it was quite weak in many regards. The basic plot works at the start but the writing is not good enough to sustain a character driven story, while later narrative twists just take away from what should have been a touching story set in reality. Worth seeing once as a coming of age story but not worthy of the praise it has garnered from some circles and not one I'll be rushing back to for a second viewing.
    9paul2001sw-1

    Distant voices...

    'Take Care of My Cat' is a thoughtful, sensitive and perceptive look at the lives of a group of young Koreans living in Inchon (Seoul's port city) as they undergo the difficult transition from students to workers. The characters of the different girls, and the changing interactions between them, are depicted with considerable skill and subtlety, as the film observes how the proliferation of mobile phones in society has not necessarily eliminated loneliness, and explores the (neo-Loachian) idea of the difficulty in maintaining relationships that straddle class boundaries. For a European, the film also provides an interesting portrait of contemporary Korea; awash with modern technology, but nonetheless still suffering from a relatively impoverished urban environment. The details are convincing and fascinating; the themes universal and profound, yet the film makes its points lightly and with grace. The result is genuinely moving experience. Definitely recommended.
    6dave-658

    Good story, quite subtle remarks on women in korea

    This movie works on two levels, basically the story that happens and also as a subtle progressive social commentary about the state of korea and how women are somewhat confined and the "minor" injustices they face all the time. I wouldn't go so far as to call it feminist because what alot of the movie is dealing with is just the basic struggle for existence, and how each of the girls can fit into the world somehow.

    The story at first begins somewhat boring as its unclear what the purposes of the movie are, but around 20 minutes into the movie when Hye-ju rejects JiYoung's gift of the cat, and then later fails to meet her on time at a restaurant, it is clear that the movie is finally starting to move with its plot in some noticeable direction. And the way it does so is very smooth and well directed you slowly become immersed in the intricate details of thier world, which is a fundamental quality of a of a good movie. As a drama, it does its job of immersing the viewer in the emotions of its characters. I think it is a definitely progressive style drama as many other coming of age styled dramas are, and is enjoyable to watch throughout because you are always getting a realistic look at modern korean life as the story moves.

    Worth watching!

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    FAQ16

    • How long is Take Care of My Cat?Alimenté par Alexa

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 13 octobre 2001 (Corée du Sud)
    • Pays d’origine
      • Corée du Sud
    • Site officiel
      • Official North America Site
    • Langue
      • Coréen
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Take Care of My Cat
    • Lieux de tournage
      • Incheon, Corée du Sud
    • Sociétés de production
      • CJ Entertainment
      • Masulpiri Films
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Box-office

    Modifier
    • Montant brut aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 9 866 $US
    • Week-end de sortie aux États-Unis et au Canada
      • 3 137 $US
      • 20 oct. 2002
    • Montant brut mondial
      • 64 591 $US
    Voir les infos détaillées du box-office sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

    Modifier
    • Durée
      1 heure 52 minutes
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Mixage
      • Dolby Digital
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.85 : 1

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