puxzkkx wrote:as far as I remember there were no scenes that focused on her specifically reacting, in an emotional way, to her situation (despite screaming "Sonny! Sonny!")
Sorry to leap in if domino's already addressed this, but doesn't the entire form of the film constitute her 'reaction to the situation' (and account for the absence of more conventionally melodramatic a-weepin' and a-wailin')?
And I agree with Gringo Tex that
3-Iron is "fucking awful", but for me ripping off Wong Kar-wai was the least of its crimes. But I'd seen Kim's earlier films and saw this as yet another installment of his designer new-age misogyny. Now I won't go near his work with a bargepole (even one with a big sharp hook on the end).
As for me:
Woman on the Beach – This was the only Hong I hadn’t seen, so I was sort of keeping it in reserve – in case he was run over by a bus or something. Wouldn’t you like to have a major film by one of your favourite directors up your sleeve for emergencies? But I couldn’t really justify not seeing it for the 00s list.
I don’t have a lot to say about it. It’s probably his most Rohmeresque film – even more so than
Night and Day, which was much more explicit in its homage. He’s a little more generous to the feckless Korean male at the centre of the film than he has been in other recent films (
Woman is the Future of Man,
Tale of Cinema,
Night and Day) and the whole film is relatively relaxed (as was also the case with his subsequent film). Ultimately, however, I miss the brilliant structural games of his earlier films, and his first four features are still my favourites.
Virgin Stripped Bare By Her Bachelors will make my top ten and
On the Occasion of Remembering the Turning Gate will be in contention for the lower reaches of my list. This was a delightful watch, but it’s down the queue behind
Night and Day and
Woman Is the Future of Man.