Who was the woman Gianna saw falling upside down past her window? And when?
I had similar questions and I'm glad to see most were answered/resolved here in the thread. At first I assumed the lady falling past the balcony was her deranged friend (Moon). I thought maybe the court scenes were flashbacks and Moon subsequently killed herself later in the timeline, but that would mean they just let her go, and the film didn't play out that way. (Of course, Moon essentially did the same thing--got free for a moment and took a dive). I like the answer that it was the cat-lady. I'm not sure the movie sets it up, and really there's no point for the scene if it doesn't pay off later, but at least that theory makes sense and is not
completely random.
Why didn't the director show Jung-won and Gianna make similar eye contact when it was her turn?
EXACTLY! This is an example of what I meant when I referred to the film missing opportunities. The lead-up to the scene, when Yun is calling him and hinting at what she's about to do is powerful and setting up a call-back to the earlier scene...and...poof, there she goes. I'm not sure what response the director was hoping for in the viewer, but I'm pretty sure he wasn't aiming for what he got from me.
How many kids actually got tossed off the balcony? And who actually tossed them?
That confused me too. The scene that accompanied the building maintenance guy's testimony definitely showed Yun on the balcony holding the baby. I, too, thought maybe Moon was covering for Yun's crime, but that didn't make much sense, given the way the story played out. But then...
Finally, Moon Jeong-sook was left along with two babies, and they're crawling toward her, and she's losing it, and then ... one ... starts ... to ... climb .. up ... on ... her ... and the horror, the horror of these hungry babies with their beady eyes that just keep on coming at her ... and she's got her back against the wall, but they keep on coming, and it just gets too much, so she goes out on the balcony and puts them over the railing, where they can't get her anymore.
I LOVE this. It makes perfect sense. Deranged Moon tossed both kids, and Yun witnessed the latter of the two (presumably, her child).
The scene that showed Gianna on the balcony was a playing out of what the husband believed happened.
The husband wanted to believe that his wife was innocent, but couldn't get his lingering doubt that she was just as crazy as Moon (and therefore maybe just as guilty) out of his mind.
I never would have come up with that myself, but I like it. Fits nicely.
...and there's something about some significance of the five concentric circles Jung-won draws as a child ... it seemed to me that the biological father may have been upset by these when he was beating Jung-won, in the house that seemed to be heavily adorned with Eastern religious iconography.
I wish the backstory was more clear. The unveiling of the fellow's forgotten past would seem to be the crux of the movie. I did catch some dialogue that he (as a child) had some "powerful shaministic ability" or something, and something about spirals, but I don't see how that tied into the toddler truck crunch or why he decided to burn his family up. I know he thought he would protect his sister, and when she was injured as well, it shook him. The movie did foreshadow this a bit in one scene that showed the two dead girls on the train all burnt and charred. (In all the other scenes, the girls are not outwardly injured.).
But I never could make much logical sense out of the backstory. Which, in turn, makes it very hard for me as a viewer to CARE about these grand revelations he's coming to grips with. MISSED OPPORTUNITY. The toddler truck crunch was effective in isolation, but took me out of the story. The guy backs over the kid on accident, in view of two witnesses (right?), not to mention anyone else who might have been looking out a window or something, and then gets out of his truck and stuffs the kid in the sewer grate? In broad daylight??? With the kid's fingers sticking out to be easily found?
This makes no sense to me. Since it was an accident, the guy would not have been culpable anyway. (Whoever left the child to play alone in the middle of the street would have more blame I would think).
The scene where he confronts his pastor-father plays out almost like a parody of no one ever answering the damn question. And later, when the fellow is talking to Yun on the phone, he says pretty much "Yeah? well I asked my pastor-father if he was my real father and he said yes! So you're just a crazy troublemaker, woman!" (How he got that from the conversation *I* saw as a viewer [granted, something might have been lost in the subtitles], I'll never know.)
I'm glad Jun Ji Hyun isn't overacting here.
I think it's method acting. Give Gianna 20 Xanax and roll the film!