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2 Sœurs

Original title: Janghwa, Hongryeon
  • 2003
  • 12
  • 1h 54m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
72K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,073
28
Kim Kap-su, Yum Jung-ah, Lim Soo-jung, and Moon Geun-young in 2 Sœurs (2003)
Psychological HorrorSupernatural HorrorSuspense MysteryTragedyDramaHorrorMysteryThriller

After being institutionalized in a mental hospital, Su-mi reunites with her sister, Su-yeon, and they return to live at their country home. But strange events plague the house, leading to su... Read allAfter being institutionalized in a mental hospital, Su-mi reunites with her sister, Su-yeon, and they return to live at their country home. But strange events plague the house, leading to surprising revelations and a shocking conclusion.After being institutionalized in a mental hospital, Su-mi reunites with her sister, Su-yeon, and they return to live at their country home. But strange events plague the house, leading to surprising revelations and a shocking conclusion.

  • Director
    • Kim Jee-woon
  • Writer
    • Kim Jee-woon
  • Stars
    • Lim Soo-jung
    • Yum Jung-ah
    • Kim Kap-su
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    72K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,073
    28
    • Director
      • Kim Jee-woon
    • Writer
      • Kim Jee-woon
    • Stars
      • Lim Soo-jung
      • Yum Jung-ah
      • Kim Kap-su
    • 316User reviews
    • 255Critic reviews
    • 65Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 23 wins & 10 nominations total

    Photos73

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    Top cast18

    Edit
    Lim Soo-jung
    Lim Soo-jung
    • Soo-mi Bae - Janghwa
    Yum Jung-ah
    Yum Jung-ah
    • Heo Eun-joo - Stepmother
    Kim Kap-su
    Kim Kap-su
    • Moo-hyeon Bae - Father
    Moon Geun-young
    Moon Geun-young
    • Soo-yeon Bae - Hongryeon
    Park Mi-hyeon
    Park Mi-hyeon
    • Mrs. Bae - Soo-mi's and Soo-yeon's Mother
    • (as Park Mi-hyun)
    Gi-hong Woo
    • Sun-kyu
    Lee Seung-bi
    • Mi-hee
    Lee Dae-yeon
    Lee Dae-yeon
    • Soo-mi's Doctor
    No Seung-Jin
    • Director Hwang
    Song In-hyeok
    • Mr. Jang
    Yeong-sil Lee
    • Middle-Aged Woman
    Ae-ri Won
    • Closet Ghost…
    Seong-Young Kim
    • Nurse 2
    Song-i Kim
    • Young Soo-mi
    Seo-in Park
    • Young Soo-yeon
    Eun-mi Park
    • Soo-yeon…
    Hyeon-gyeong Chu
    • Soo-yeon…
    Song In Hyuk
    • Mr. Jang
    • Director
      • Kim Jee-woon
    • Writer
      • Kim Jee-woon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews316

    7.171.9K
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    Featured reviews

    10Vomitron_G

    Unique and genuine Korean fright-poem!

    The Beauty. The Terror. The Poetry. The Horror. The Innocence. The Guilt.

    Maybe that's just about all I should write in this comment for A TALE OF TWO SISTERS. The best thing is to just watch this movie without knowing anything about it. I myself didn't even know one single thing about the history of the two girls when I went into this movie. I just took a look at the nice cover-art, didn't even read the synopsis on the back and popped it into DVD-player. I only knew that it won several prices on festivals around the world and that it came highly recommended.

    The DVD-cover read "The Most Frightening Film since THE RING, THE GRUDGE and DARK WATER". Though the frightening-part might be right, you can forget about the rest, because the only thing A TALE OF TWO SISTERS has in common with those movie is... a ghostly apparition with long black hair. It's even a bit unfair to compare it with those famous Japanese movies, because this Korean movie has a lot more to offer and is in fact a bit more complicated and intelligent than those others.

    This movie simply is a small masterpiece, and here are some reasons (without telling anything about the plot): The movie itself caught me off guard at least two times with clever surprise-twists. And just when you think you've had the conclusion (whether you get it or not, that's irrelevant for the moment) and you think the movie will end... this movie goes on a bit longer. The cinematography is amazing, using bright colors during the day and dark shades at night. The camera-work is excellent with the director sometimes choosing impressive, if not, innovating angles. Some shots are pure poetry (e.g. the top-shot with the two sisters at the lake). It all looks very stylish. There are only four main characters, but the intrigue surrounding them is intense. The story itself starts a bit slow, but there's a lot of variety in tone and emotions to keep it interesting. There was even one scene (when the girls took off towards the lake) that suddenly had me remembering Peter Jackson's HEAVENLY CREATURES. But when the horror kicks in, it's quite effective. There are also a few successful surprise-scares in it. Damn, I jumped right up from my sofa. The musical score is great, and at times when it's not supposed to be scary, I couldn't help but noticing that it had sort of an Italian feeling to it. A bit strange for a Korean movie. But nevertheless, a great score. So much care went into every detail of this film, including a perfectly balanced surround sound.

    I also think that calling A TALE OF TWO SISTERS just a horror movie is giving it not enough credit. It's more a mysterious horror-drama that works both on a psychological and supernatural level. No matter how you look at it, this is Asian horror that ranks way up there amongst the finest. It might not be gory, but it gets pretty scary at times and the subject matter is pretty disturbed. So if you haven't seen it yet, then find a copy, pop it into your DVD-player, go with the flow and make sure you give this movie your full attention for it's 110 minutes running time.

    There, I hope I did a good job praising it without spoiling anything.
    BrianThibodeau

    So solid in construction, so consistent in tone and so beautifully disorienting

    A TALE OF TWO SISTERS goes the furthest of any Asian horror film in proving that Asian horror films are the only horror films you really need to watch. As someone whose grown to love Asian chillers, and as someone who lives for those precious moments when a film actually surprises with a twist ending that I didn't see coming (or at least suspect), I was totally blindsided by this film's intricate plotting.

    The set up is simple. Two girls return from the hospital after an extended illness with their father to an imposing, rural, Korean-Gothic house. Almost immediately, their snarky, vaguely condescending and suspiciously omnipresent stepmother (Yeom Jeong-ah, who played a pivotal character in TELL ME SOMETHING) is on them, welcoming them and criticizing them in equal measure (a not-unfamiliar Korean trait, though it deliberately borders on parody here). The tension between the three women only grows thicker from there, as the stronger sister (Im Su-jeong) protects - and increasingly, harmfully overprotects - the weaker sister (Mun Keun-yeong) from the stepmother, who may be a stronger threat than either of them can handle and who blithley informs them that life's a bitch sometimes and she ain't gonna go away!

    Obviously, relationships in the household have deteriorated to the point of open hostility and mindgames to which only the puzzlingly sedate father seems immune. Just when one wonders how much better - or worse - things were before the girls were sent away, the filmmakers drop the first of two twist-bombs that instantly provide clues to the pre-story, hints at a possible murder in the very recent past and makes the viewer replay the preceding hour in their mind from a whole new perspective. Absolutely brilliant, but it doesn't end there.

    The feud continues - and the hints at prior foul play multiply - until the father decides enough is enough and finally turns to outside help to smooth things over, at which point the puzzle starts to become diabolically clever.

    I can see where just about anyone reviewing this film has to remain frustratingly vague in regards to its psychological underpinnings, so solid is its construction, so consistent is its tone and so beautifully paranoid and disorienting is its atmosphere that upon a second viewing, you'd be hard-pressed not to stare at your companion's face (or the collective faces of an audience, preferably) instead of the screen as the realization sets in.

    Structurally, comparisons could be made to similar supernatural American thrillers (one in particular from recent vintage) where the ending forces you to reevaluate all that has gone before - and, of course, to rescreen the film to see if the director was sharp enough to include the visual cues you obviously missed. Only this time out, supernatural explanations are not required to understand the bizarre, seemingly paranormal goings-on inside the house. Quite the opposite, really, as suspension of the audience's belief in the supernatural is the film's ultimate goal (after gleefully, necessarily trading in spook show delights for the better part of two hours, no less), and a more clever mechanism by which to do it I've yet to see, even in the consistently intelligence-rewarding pantheon of Asian horror.

    Truly a fantastic, artistic piece of movie-making. Highly recommended. (Incidentally, if you purchase the Korean Special Edition DVD, there's a lengthy series of deleted scenes that, while fascinating and informative in their own right, ably demonstrate how tricky this film must have been for the director to pull off . Though several of the scenes clearly give away just a teensy bit too much information, once you've seen the film, it's nice to see how they actually further support the psychological intentions of the filmmakers yet, at the same time, had to go.)
    6AvionPrince16

    a complex plot.... maybe too complex

    I dont really know what to say. I didnt enjoyed the movie but i didnt hate it too so im quite balanced in my opinion because sometimes i didnt understand some of the moments of the movie but i need to say that the movie have a complex story maybe too much and can confused the audience in my opinion. Some interesting characters, some tense moments and an intriguing plot. A good experience of Asian horror but i need to say that the plot is too much complex in my opinion.
    9afdiazr

    You MUST see this!!!

    I love horror films, but I think they work way better when they hide a dramatic impact behind (The Devil's Backbone, The Exorcist, for example). This is that kind of film, and it's not only eerie and terrifying when it has to be, it is also really beautiful. A Tale of Two Sisters starts really slow, so if you're in a hurry to see ghosts in the first 20 minutes you will be disappointed. Actually this is not a ghost story –though there are some. It's something more complex, and it's done in such a way that it beats Ringu and The Grudge out of the ring no sweat. A Tale… is a way more clever film than those huge cultural hits, because it really cares for its characters, and the direction is flawless. Every detail in this film will leave you breathless if you're the kind of person who loves to pay attention to details while watching a movie. The acting is superb, specially from the stepmother and the main girl. Those two are worth the price of the ticket alone. Do yourself a favor and watch this awesome film.
    8Coventry

    Better than all the Ringu's, Ju-on's and Jian Gui's together!!

    Perhaps I'm one of the only avid horror fans who thinks that the recent overload of Asian shockers is so over-hyped! Films like "Ringu" or the "The Eye" – which are praised all over the world – simply didn't convince me and they looked more boring than frightening. Well, this blunt opinion doesn't go for the South Korean gem "A Tale of Two Sisters". This is a stylish and utterly complex psychological terror-tale that REALLY gets under your skin! The plot, based on a local folklore tale, might be a little too confusing to get this film listed among the all-time greatest genre achievements, but the atmosphere and tension-building surely provokes feelings of great respect. This is one of those few films that are impossible to label: the events in "Two Sisters" qualify as mind-bending horror as well as intense family drama and a deeply psychological portrait. Besides a mesmerizing story, "A tale of Two Sisters" also has all the great elements that I feel are usually missing in Asian horror films like compelling music, good acting and innovative camera-work. The mansion were the family events take place is brilliantly illustrated like a truly creepy place where secrets and danger lurk behind every door. Several sequences (like the dinner with relatives or the nightly appearance in the girls' room) are pretty much the ultimate in eeriness. They really made me feel uncomfortable and I do like to believe that I've seen my share of spooky horror. "A Tale of Two Sisters" is a terrific movie-adventure and a definite must see for Asian film fanatics. A little warning for people with a short attention-span, though: this movie forces you to have your eyes and ears focused at at all time. It's also a film that requires repeated viewing, even though no one will never really "get it" for a full 100%.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      When the film was originally released, It became both the highest-grossing Korean horror film of all time and the first one to be screened in American theatres.
    • Goofs
      The ghost that "Eun-ju" (Su-mi acting out a split personality) sees in the kitchen scene is revealed to be Su-yeon as contextualized by the visual clues present throughout the film. However, in this instance, Su-yeon's ghost has long hair reaching her waist, while the actual Su-yeon has a short haircut, which appears to be the movie cheating to avoid spoiling the reveal.
    • Quotes

      Mi-hee: There was a girl under the kitchen sink.

    • Connections
      Featured in WatchMojo: Top 10 "In Their Head" Characters in Movies (2016)

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    FAQ

    • How long is A Tale of Two Sisters?Powered by Alexa
    • Is this based on a novel?
    • Who are the ghosts that keep appearing around the house? (I.E. from under the sink, the window, etc.) Also explain their presence in the film.

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 16, 2004 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • South Korea
    • Language
      • Korean
    • Also known as
      • A Tale of Two Sisters
    • Filming locations
      • Yusin-ri, Yureo-myeon, Boseong-gun, Jeollanamdo, South Korea(location)
    • Production companies
      • B.O.M. Film Productions Co.
      • Nova Media
      • iPictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $72,541
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $1,060
      • Dec 5, 2004
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,080,087
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 54 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital EX
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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