divemaster13
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For Monday's Review, as promised, I share my thoughts on the quiet, yet forceful, relationship drama Wanee & Junah.
Wanee & Junah (2001)
Directed by Yong-gyun Kim
Starring Hee-seon Kim, Jin-mo Ju, Seung-woo Cho, and Kang-hee Choi
In Korean with English subtitles
Film: 4.5 stars (out of 5)
This was a movie I had only seen once before, back in 2005. It has stuck with me all that time because I enjoyed it so much even though I didn’t get around to a repeat viewing until just this week. I was curious if it would still have the same effect on me, and you can see by my rating that it did.
The movie’s story is actually rather simple, focusing on the relationship between the two leads of the title. Not much happens in the way of plot. There’s no adventure or melodrama or thrills. Nobody is dying of cancer. Even when Wanee’s cute friend (So-yang) from their school days shows up, the wedge that is introduced is so not the obvious one. Having said that, it’s not the most accessible film for a casual audience. The director doesn’t make it easy. But that was okay with me. I enjoyed the challenge of figuring out what made the characters tick rather than having it spoon-fed to me.
So, what’s it about? Twenty-somethings Wanee and her boyfriend Junah have been a couple for about a year, and recently living together in a quiet small town not too far from Seoul. It’s not the countryside, but it’s not the big city. Both are artistic types (she, an up-and-coming artist for an animation studio and he, a scriptwriter trying to make his first breakthrough). Wanee is a bit further along in her career than Junah is in his, but there doesn’t seem to be any real competitive fire between them.
And in fact, that’s the impression we get of their relationship. Whatever fire there might have been has fallen into mundane comfort as far as we can tell. I purposely called this a "relationship drama" rather than a "romantic drama" because there's nothing all that "romantic" about the relationship. Wanee calls most of the shots, as it’s her family home that they both live in. Junah moseys around the house and yard, writes his script, and not much else it seems. But they both seem content in this zone of familiarity. They occupy a room, doing their own things, content to just share proximity. We never see any real sexual affection, unless you count holding hands on the sidewalk; and the one time she calls him “honey,” his only comment, completely non-judgmental, is that she hasn’t called him that since like forever. It’s telling (and more than a bit ironic) that when So-yang shows up she notes that their relationship is more like brother-sister than lovers.
That’s not a whole lot to hold a movie together, unless “something happens” or we learn a bit more about what makes the characters tick. We get a little of the former, and a lot of the latter and that, to me, is what makes the film a special one.
The “something happens” is that So-yang arrives in town to stay with Wanee for a short while. Wanee has just found out from her mom that Wanee’s brother is returning to Korea for a visit, from a break in his studies abroad. We see from flashbacks that Wanee, her brother, and So-yang hung out a lot together during their school days, and it’s quickly evident why So-yang is hoping that the brother drops by for a visit.
But he never does.
Oh, but is his presence felt. It’s funny that the one character who has the least amount of screen time in some way is the most forceful presence in the movie. His part of the story is told in flashback and we come to gradually understand a lot more about Wanee. (I really liked Wanee and connected with her character and all the difficult issues she is holding in her heart.) Junah, too, has to deal with the knowledge of newly discovered information.
I mentioned before that the director does not make it easy. This was his first film (and he never really did much else other than The Red Shoes, which I thought was a very effective horror/drama), and he had some stylistic touches that in a lesser movie would have me rolling my eyes. Believe me, if I had not been totally caught up in the story and the characters, I would have had little patience for some of the filming techniques. But as it is, I found myself appreciating and even applauding them. But you have to be on your toes. On more than one occasion people are shown onscreen and it takes a few moments to realize they’re not really there. It’s just the way the director is showing a memory, or a long-distance conversation. Some of the scene transitions were inspired. For example, the first time we are tossed into a flashback, the transition scene shows Junah resetting a clock. In another scene, the director uses the thump-thump sound of a record player needle bouncing against the end track of the LP as a proxy for a beating heart, in a scene where, yes, a heart would be beating in a combination of fear, longing, and anticipation. A more perfect scene could not have been filmed.
So, all in all a quiet little movie with good (and REAL) characters, dawning (not spoon-fed or sledgehammered) understandings in the viewer, special touches, and clever filmmaking (besides the flashbacks and such, the movie is bookended with animated scenes from a childhood incident that are effective in their simplicity). It would have been easy for the film to turn to spectacle (Junah falls for the friend! The brother shows up! Wanee will have a cursing, crying, screaming meltdown!), and I’m so glad that it never did.
The DVD is Region 0, although it says Region 3 on the case. The Korean 5.1 audio is fixed, and you have the choice of Korean or English subtitles. The subtitles are glitchty in a few spots but nothing egregious. The Special Features (which are not subtitled) include cast/crew information (Korean text only), a music video, 6 or 7 deleted scenes, a featurette showing the live action performances from which the animated portions of the film were taken, and behind-the-scenes “making of” footage/interviews.
Wanee & Junah (2001)
Directed by Yong-gyun Kim
Starring Hee-seon Kim, Jin-mo Ju, Seung-woo Cho, and Kang-hee Choi
In Korean with English subtitles
Film: 4.5 stars (out of 5)
This was a movie I had only seen once before, back in 2005. It has stuck with me all that time because I enjoyed it so much even though I didn’t get around to a repeat viewing until just this week. I was curious if it would still have the same effect on me, and you can see by my rating that it did.
The movie’s story is actually rather simple, focusing on the relationship between the two leads of the title. Not much happens in the way of plot. There’s no adventure or melodrama or thrills. Nobody is dying of cancer. Even when Wanee’s cute friend (So-yang) from their school days shows up, the wedge that is introduced is so not the obvious one. Having said that, it’s not the most accessible film for a casual audience. The director doesn’t make it easy. But that was okay with me. I enjoyed the challenge of figuring out what made the characters tick rather than having it spoon-fed to me.
So, what’s it about? Twenty-somethings Wanee and her boyfriend Junah have been a couple for about a year, and recently living together in a quiet small town not too far from Seoul. It’s not the countryside, but it’s not the big city. Both are artistic types (she, an up-and-coming artist for an animation studio and he, a scriptwriter trying to make his first breakthrough). Wanee is a bit further along in her career than Junah is in his, but there doesn’t seem to be any real competitive fire between them.
And in fact, that’s the impression we get of their relationship. Whatever fire there might have been has fallen into mundane comfort as far as we can tell. I purposely called this a "relationship drama" rather than a "romantic drama" because there's nothing all that "romantic" about the relationship. Wanee calls most of the shots, as it’s her family home that they both live in. Junah moseys around the house and yard, writes his script, and not much else it seems. But they both seem content in this zone of familiarity. They occupy a room, doing their own things, content to just share proximity. We never see any real sexual affection, unless you count holding hands on the sidewalk; and the one time she calls him “honey,” his only comment, completely non-judgmental, is that she hasn’t called him that since like forever. It’s telling (and more than a bit ironic) that when So-yang shows up she notes that their relationship is more like brother-sister than lovers.
That’s not a whole lot to hold a movie together, unless “something happens” or we learn a bit more about what makes the characters tick. We get a little of the former, and a lot of the latter and that, to me, is what makes the film a special one.
The “something happens” is that So-yang arrives in town to stay with Wanee for a short while. Wanee has just found out from her mom that Wanee’s brother is returning to Korea for a visit, from a break in his studies abroad. We see from flashbacks that Wanee, her brother, and So-yang hung out a lot together during their school days, and it’s quickly evident why So-yang is hoping that the brother drops by for a visit.
But he never does.
Oh, but is his presence felt. It’s funny that the one character who has the least amount of screen time in some way is the most forceful presence in the movie. His part of the story is told in flashback and we come to gradually understand a lot more about Wanee. (I really liked Wanee and connected with her character and all the difficult issues she is holding in her heart.) Junah, too, has to deal with the knowledge of newly discovered information.
I mentioned before that the director does not make it easy. This was his first film (and he never really did much else other than The Red Shoes, which I thought was a very effective horror/drama), and he had some stylistic touches that in a lesser movie would have me rolling my eyes. Believe me, if I had not been totally caught up in the story and the characters, I would have had little patience for some of the filming techniques. But as it is, I found myself appreciating and even applauding them. But you have to be on your toes. On more than one occasion people are shown onscreen and it takes a few moments to realize they’re not really there. It’s just the way the director is showing a memory, or a long-distance conversation. Some of the scene transitions were inspired. For example, the first time we are tossed into a flashback, the transition scene shows Junah resetting a clock. In another scene, the director uses the thump-thump sound of a record player needle bouncing against the end track of the LP as a proxy for a beating heart, in a scene where, yes, a heart would be beating in a combination of fear, longing, and anticipation. A more perfect scene could not have been filmed.
So, all in all a quiet little movie with good (and REAL) characters, dawning (not spoon-fed or sledgehammered) understandings in the viewer, special touches, and clever filmmaking (besides the flashbacks and such, the movie is bookended with animated scenes from a childhood incident that are effective in their simplicity). It would have been easy for the film to turn to spectacle (Junah falls for the friend! The brother shows up! Wanee will have a cursing, crying, screaming meltdown!), and I’m so glad that it never did.
The DVD is Region 0, although it says Region 3 on the case. The Korean 5.1 audio is fixed, and you have the choice of Korean or English subtitles. The subtitles are glitchty in a few spots but nothing egregious. The Special Features (which are not subtitled) include cast/crew information (Korean text only), a music video, 6 or 7 deleted scenes, a featurette showing the live action performances from which the animated portions of the film were taken, and behind-the-scenes “making of” footage/interviews.
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