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Oasis

Original title: Oasiseu
  • 2002
  • Tous publics
  • 2h 13m
IMDb RATING
7.8/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Moon So-ri and Sul Kyung-gu in Oasis (2002)
Tragic RomanceDramaRomance

An irresponsible and childish ex-con befriends a girl with cerebral palsy and develops a progressively stronger bond with her.An irresponsible and childish ex-con befriends a girl with cerebral palsy and develops a progressively stronger bond with her.An irresponsible and childish ex-con befriends a girl with cerebral palsy and develops a progressively stronger bond with her.

  • Director
    • Lee Chang-dong
  • Writer
    • Lee Chang-dong
  • Stars
    • Sul Kyung-gu
    • Moon So-ri
    • Ahn Nae-sang
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.8/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Lee Chang-dong
    • Writer
      • Lee Chang-dong
    • Stars
      • Sul Kyung-gu
      • Moon So-ri
      • Ahn Nae-sang
    • 47User reviews
    • 56Critic reviews
    • 79Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 26 wins & 3 nominations total

    Photos12

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    Top cast16

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    Sul Kyung-gu
    Sul Kyung-gu
    • Jong-du Hong
    Moon So-ri
    Moon So-ri
    • Han Gong-joo
    Ahn Nae-sang
    Ahn Nae-sang
    • Jong-Il Hong
    Ryoo Seung-wan
    Ryoo Seung-wan
    • Jong-Sae Hong
    Choo Kwi-jung
    Choo Kwi-jung
    • Jong-Sae's Wife
    Jin-gu Kim
    • Mrs. Hong
    Son Byung-ho
    Son Byung-ho
    • Han Sang-shik
    Ga-hyun Yun
    • Sang-Shik's Wife
    Park Myung-shin
    Park Myung-shin
    • Woman Neighbor
    • (as Park Myung-sin)
    Park Gyeong-geun
    • Woman Neighbor's Husband
    Han Dae-gwan
    • Detective 2
    Jin-seob Han
    • Detective 1
    Lee Jong-woo
    • Soldier Kim
    Ko Seo-hie
    Ko Seo-hie
    • Bottled water woman
    Gwak Soo-jung
    • Apartment landlady
    • (as Kwak Soo-jung)
    Kim Young-joo
    • Jong-Doo's relative
    • Director
      • Lee Chang-dong
    • Writer
      • Lee Chang-dong
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews47

    7.811.1K
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    Featured reviews

    10sain11

    Oustanding

    Oasis is a love story of truly unique proportions. It is simply unlike any movie you are likely to see.

    Confronting, unusual, at times violent, but also heartbreakingly honest.

    Lead by a stunning performance by So-ri Moon, and ably assisted by Kyung-gu Sol. The two bring amazing humanity to two very difficult and unusual character. So-ri in particular is brilliant, flawless and complex in her portrayal of the disabled Gong-ju Han. Her performance should be watched by any aspiring actor or actress as it is astonishingly good.

    The plot is difficult to describe without it sounding bizarre and unrealistic, but the direction and script transcend any difficulties the subject matter brings up, and ultimately deliver the viewer with an unrivaled experience in what cinema was meant to do. That is, show us life, in all it's intricate forms, to inspire us, challenge us and help us grow.

    Oasis is a power-house of modern cinema. An instant classic. It shows difficult characters, going through difficult situations, and the director has refused to water-down any aspect of the film, making it very confronting for the viewer.

    Yet another in a growing list of Korean films that have blown me away. Their industry is the best around in my opinion, combining the technical abilities of the big-budget Hollywood films, with the personal, human stories that you would see in European cinema, but doing this with an obviously Asian aesthetic. If you like Kong Kong or Japanese films, I recommend stepping up to Korean films, they are generally more personal, and shot with as much visual gloss as anything from the US.
    scifinerdgrl

    Fabulous Acting by Two Tremendous Leads

    The premise of this story challenges both of its romantic leads to use their bodies to convey the characters' emotions. Jong-du, played by Sol Kyung-gu, is an awkward ex-con whose older brother calls him immature but he seems a little crazy, or maybe mentally deficient. His family reluctantly helps him out, but he is an embarrassment and a nuisance to them.

    Gong-ju (Moon So-ri) is a woman with cerebral palsy whose family is just as bad as Jong-du's. When Jong-du begins to visit her an odd relationship develops, with each bringing the other an acceptance and appreciation neither has felt before.

    Moon So-ri's performance is so convincing I actually thought she had c.p. until a fantasy sequence showed what Gong-ju imagined herself doing if she were not disabled. But it's not just the contortions of c.p. that she portrays. She manages to show every possible emotion within the confines of c.p. spasms and she brings the character to life with a fully developed range of emotions and intellect.

    Sol Kyung-gu's body language is just as effective, though his performance is easily overshadowed by Moon So-ri's. He is by turns menacing, sweet, dim-witted, shy, playful, inconsiderate and contrite, and most of this comes out through his body language.

    I saw this movie with English subtitles, but the acting is so effective that you almost don't need to read them.

    p.s. keep three hankies handy
    9Killer-40

    Destruction of love

    At the beginning of the "L'Abri"-screening (which I discuss somewhere else) at the film market MIFED in Milano, CJ Entertainment's young sales responsible asked me: "Which Korean films have you bought?" - "All of them", I answered, to make a point: Korean's movies were just unbeatable in 2002. Then I confessed that I was actually a journalist, not a buyer. The young man surprised me with another question: "Did you cry at the end of 'The Way Home'?" - "No", I said, thinking of my grandmother, "actually I cried at the end of OASIS."

    Movies should move viewers. No hight tech genre film can beat what goes straight to your heart. The love of a naive, warmhearted fool (Sol Kyung-gu as Jong-du) to a spasmic beauty (Moon So-ri as Gong-ju) that is unable to walk and clearly articulate herself is attacked by both of their families. It could be considered a love between handicapped and thus underline the demand for a change of law which seems to have its flaws in Korea as well as here in Germany. Prohibited is the unthinkable, i.e. the sexual demands of those who are stigmatised to not have them. The sad outcome of the events is lightened by the unchangeable affection of the male protagonist. Feminists might argue against the easy way in which the attempt to rape the spasmic woman turns into mutual love. The real challenge for the excellent actress Moon So-ri was indeed to transmit whether we see joy or pain in her wincing mimic. Have you ever asked yourself how a person suffering from cerebral palsy would look during orgasm? See for yourself. The elegant camera moves from the common theme of the movie to dreamlike scenes where all of Gong-jus illness is gone. Her dancing with a young elephant had the same non-intellectual humor as the tree-cutting of Jong-du. When the lights go on in your theatre, you might ask yourself how deeply YOU are able to love.
    10mitsounob

    Another masterpiece by Lee Chang-Dong

    The director had been known in Korea as a novelist before he started to make films. That must be the reason why his films give us always the impression that they are deeply literary much more than cinematic.

    "Oasis" is a very literary film like his other films, but it also gives us the specific pleasure to watch movies by the imaginary scenes dreamed by a handicapped woman named Gong-ju, for instance. These scenes are sentimental, but they are incredibly beautiful and delicate (these pigeons and butterflies flying in her room, for example). And the scene where Gong-ju sings a song to another protagonist Jong-du must be one of the most beautiful scenes of "confession of love" ever depicted by a film. That is the moment, I am sure, when this film takes suddenly on the features of something sacred.

    The director says this is a film about "border" as well as "communication." And in order to show the difficulty of communication and/or of going across the border, he tried to make Jong-du an abominable and disgusting person, especially at the beginning of the film. If you feel uncomfortable when you start to watch this film, you should consider that such discomfort was intentional even though the behaviors by Jong-du seem to be extremely violent and selfish. And you should also be patient until the "miraculous" moment of the "mutation" (from vulgarity to holiness) comes. You will certainly forget about the discomfort you had felt.

    And this is naturally a film about Love. It shows us just "one of" the forms of love, should I probably say, since the one shown in this film is too special and peculiar, but still I am tempted to say: "This is the Love."

    I though of "The Legend of St. Julian Hospitator" by Gustave Flaubert, but I do not know if I should expect that the protagonists would be called under the name of the "saints" or so. And I also remembered the heroine Sarah of "The End of the Affair" by Graham Greene. Sarah writes in her diary, thinking of her lover named Maurice, with whom she had decided not to meet again because of the promise with God: "I'm not at peace any more. I just want him like I used to in the old days. I want to be eating sandwiches with him. I want to be drinking with him in a bar. I'm tired and I don't want any more pain. I want Maurice. I want ordinary corrupt human love."

    Once swore to God to separate from his lover, Sarah wants him always, being full of desires and wanting "corrupt human love" even just before her death. She stayed secular and even vulgar until the end, even though the author must have wished to lead her to the path toward God. And that is just why Sarah, that miserable mortal, stays always in my mind.

    Same thing for Gong-ju and Jong-du. Their happiness may exist in this real world full of prejudice and discrimination, where ugly desire or ordinary cheapness of human life smears them. But it may also give them pleasure to love, to help each other, and/or to share something precious between them. They do not need God, but they just need each other.

    Nobody knows whether or not the future will congratulate them in the end, but probably, as did the director, should I leave them in the room of Gong-ju, where many dusts floating in the air are shimmering with the sunlight, and Gong-ju seems to be smiling, reading the letter from Jong-du. We don't know if they will be able to finish their story, but anyway, they have started it. Everything is now up to them.

    10/10.
    10vvanpo

    Masterwork from Lee Chang-Dong

    "Oasis" is the story of the relationship of a man imprisoned by his mind with a woman imprisoned by her body. That they establish a relationship comes as much because of their handicaps as in spite of them.

    I knew before seeing the film that Moon So-ri was an able-bodied actress. As a result, at first I wasn't convinced she was playing someone with cerebral palsy. But Lee Chang-dong does a brilliant thing. He films several scenes that become the imaginings and fantasies of Gong-ju, Moon's character, as an able-bodied woman. This had the effect on me of seeing Gong-ju as disabled. And it spells out clearly that cerebral palsy is a physical condition not a mental one.

    Sol Kyung-gu as Jong-du is perfect. I've been describing Jong-du as "simple-minded" to others but that doesn't pinpoint his mental condition. I might say he is carefree but it's not just an attitude; he is carefree to the point of mental illness. His condition makes him act both bad (he's been in prison three times) and good (he absolutely sees right through Gong-ju's handicap and truly comes to care for her). While Gong-ju is frustrated over her condition and how others use her it, Jong-du appears so utterly accepting of his fate that he doesn't even defend himself. I can't stop thinking about how Mr. Sol has played this interesting character.

    Both Gong-ju's and Jong-du's families scorn and pity their conditions. But watch how they also come to exploit them as well.

    I highly recommend this film.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Official submission of South Korea for the 'Best Foreign Language Film' category of the 75th Academy Awards in 2003.
    • Connections
      Featured in The 20th IFP Independent Spirit Awards (2005)

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Oasis?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 12, 2003 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • South Korea
    • Language
      • Korean
    • Also known as
      • Оаза
    • Filming locations
      • Seoul, South Korea
    • Production companies
      • Dream Venture Capital
      • East Film Company
      • UniKorea Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $10,304
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $6,485
      • May 9, 2004
    • Gross worldwide
      • $6,697,119
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 13m(133 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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