This exploration of grief in contemporary South Korea plods along adequately and intelligently.
Secret Sunshine
Runtime: 2 hrs 22 mins
Synopsis: NEW YORK PREMIERE AT NEW YORK FILM FESTIVAL 2007 THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE TO BE DETERMINED With SECRET SUNSHINE, South Korean director Lee Chang-dong (PEPPERMINT CANDY, OASIS) proves that he is one of the world's most accomplished directors. His latest film is a sprawling tale of... NEW YORK PREMIERE AT NEW YORK FILM FESTIVAL 2007 THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE TO BE DETERMINED With SECRET SUNSHINE, South Korean director Lee Chang-dong (PEPPERMINT CANDY, OASIS) proves that he is one of the world's most accomplished directors. His latest film is a sprawling tale of personal transformation after grief shatters the life of an innocent woman. Jeon Do-yeon, who deservedly won the Best Actress prize at the 2007 Cannes Film Festival, plays Shin-ae, a widow who has decided to move to her late husband's hometown of Miryang (which stands for "Secret Sunshine") with her young son, Jun. Upon arriving, she meets an ordinary mechanic Kim Jong-chan (played by Korean superstar Song Kang-ho), who clearly takes a shine to her. Shin-ae finds difficulty acclimating to her new environment, but after opening a piano academy she begins to settle into life in the small town. But then tragedy strikes once again, further derailing her attempts at conquering her loneliness and grief. Her previous disdain for religion is shattered one day at a church service, setting her on a spiritual journey that seemed incomprehensible just weeks before. SECRET SUNSHINE is an ambitious film that feels like several movies in one. Do-yeon delivers one of the finest performances of recent memory, covering the gamut of human emotions with seeming effortlessness. Kang-ho, who is one of South Korea's most recognizable stars (THE HOST, SYMPATHY FOR MR. VENGEANCE), gleefully embraces his role as an Everyman, providing depth in what could have otherwise been a forgettable role. Ultimately, it is Chang-dong's assured writing and directing that makes SECRET SUNSHINE such a revelation. Though his film is hard to categorize, it is just that expansiveness that makes it such a tour-de-force. [More]
Genre: Foreign Films
Starring: Jeon Do-Yeon, Song Kang-ho
Reviews
A secular hymn to the small triumphs and cavernous tragedies of the everyday, and to our awesome ability to cope.
Perfect for those wishing to enjoy a nice traumatizing time at the movies.
Even as the film piles awkwardness and suffering upon its character, it never feels exploitative or emotionally manipulative, maintaining a restrained tone entirely devoid of melodrama.
There's more truth and wisdom in Secret Sunshine than I've seen at the movies in a long time.
A compelling and poignant Koran film about a besieged widow's journey into the far country of forgiveness.
The film is brave and unsparing (as is Jeon's performance) and asks some challenging and disquieting questions...
This fourth film from Lee Chang-dong, one of the leading lights in the new South Korean cinema, begins as a young widow moves to the small town of Milyang, where her late husband was born and where she plans to work as a piano teacher.
Emotionally complex tale of a woman's confrontation with the worst of fates.
In Lee's fourth and most ambitious feature, Jeon Do-yeon gives a startlingly vivid performance as a woman coming to terms with unfathomable family tragedy.
An ambitious, almost novelistic pic by writer-helmer Lee Chang-dong that ultimately fails to dramatize its lead character's conflicts in cinematic terms.


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