Nae maeumui punggeum
- 1999
- 1h 56m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
1.1K
YOUR RATING
A lovestruck mountain village teen juggles family responsibilities and an impossible crush on her new teacher, who appears to have eyes for someone else.A lovestruck mountain village teen juggles family responsibilities and an impossible crush on her new teacher, who appears to have eyes for someone else.A lovestruck mountain village teen juggles family responsibilities and an impossible crush on her new teacher, who appears to have eyes for someone else.
- Awards
- 6 wins & 6 nominations total
Jeon Do-yeon
- Yun Hong-yeon
- (as Do Yeon Chun)
Lee Mi-yeon
- Yang Eun-hee
- (as Mi-yeon Lee)
Kwon Nam-hee
- Nam-Hee's Mother
- (as Namhee Kwon)
Featured review
I love Do-yeon Jeon and what I love about her is that she always appears completely genuine in performance. In this film, however, her every move is riddled with acting. It's hardly her fault as she is given the mighty task of portraying a fifth-grade girl. What is that? Ten years old? Eleven? Her character could be seventeen for all I know, given the poverty and functional illiteracy of her community, but she's still a fifth-grader. All the self-conscious insecurities and pouting of a girl that agenot to mention a girl that age whose day to day life is overwhelmed by a mad crush on her new twenty-one year old school teacherall the mannerisms are forced. But enough about that. No use crying over spilled milk, or, thank god in this case, unrequited love.
The Harmonium in My Memory is a sweet little nostalgia film set in rural South Korea sometime after the war around 1960, give or take, centering on the teachers and students at a community school. Many of the students can't afford basic school supplies, are often rowdy in class and prove to be quite a handful for the rookie teacher played wonderfully by Byung-hun Lee (A Bittersweet Life; Joint Security Area). It's the youthful idealism of Lee's character who wants to treat the students with respect and tolerance set against the older teachers' old-school values of beating and discipline that serves as the film's basic theme. The other likable character in the film, played by Mi-yeon Lee, is another young teacher who takes her students outside to make noise and run off steam, much to the chagrin of her elders. She's Lee's love interest, and she and he share a passion for music, providing for many a musical moment in The Harmonium in My Memory. "Don't Break The Heart That Loves You", sung by Connie Francis, captures the torchy milieu of these characters perfectlyperhaps a little too easily.
The Harmonium in My Memory isn't a bad film, but expectations are extremely high for Do-yeon Jeon, and she disappoints; all the characters in the film are cliché; the use of dramatic music seems like a shortcut to emotions the characters aren't capable of making us feel; and the ending is manipulative, tacked on to make us get happy about a film that left us empty.
And what's the deal with kids bringing stool samples to class?
The Harmonium in My Memory is a sweet little nostalgia film set in rural South Korea sometime after the war around 1960, give or take, centering on the teachers and students at a community school. Many of the students can't afford basic school supplies, are often rowdy in class and prove to be quite a handful for the rookie teacher played wonderfully by Byung-hun Lee (A Bittersweet Life; Joint Security Area). It's the youthful idealism of Lee's character who wants to treat the students with respect and tolerance set against the older teachers' old-school values of beating and discipline that serves as the film's basic theme. The other likable character in the film, played by Mi-yeon Lee, is another young teacher who takes her students outside to make noise and run off steam, much to the chagrin of her elders. She's Lee's love interest, and she and he share a passion for music, providing for many a musical moment in The Harmonium in My Memory. "Don't Break The Heart That Loves You", sung by Connie Francis, captures the torchy milieu of these characters perfectlyperhaps a little too easily.
The Harmonium in My Memory isn't a bad film, but expectations are extremely high for Do-yeon Jeon, and she disappoints; all the characters in the film are cliché; the use of dramatic music seems like a shortcut to emotions the characters aren't capable of making us feel; and the ending is manipulative, tacked on to make us get happy about a film that left us empty.
And what's the deal with kids bringing stool samples to class?
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAt the time of filming, Do-yeon Jeon would have been 26 years old and Byung-hun Lee, 29.
- How long is The Harmonium in My Memory?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Harmonium in My Memory
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 56 minutes
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content