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A Film a Week - Love in the Big City / Daedosiui salangbeob

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 previously published on Asian Movie Pulse


People navigating love life and life in general is hardly a new subject in cinema and other art forms. Even the setting in which a straight woman lives with a gay man in the same apartment is not that new. However, Park Sang-young’s novel “Love in the Big City” is not merely a Korean riff on, let’s say, Will and Grace TV series. On the contrary, it aims for something more earnest, realistic and aware of the wider societal context.

The best-selling novel is actually getting two releases this fall. While the TV series adaptation will hit the small screens later this month, the big screen one, penned by Kim Na-deul (“Perheps Love”, 2021) and helmed by E.oni, formerly known as Lee Eon-hee (of 2016 “Missing” fame), has already premiered at Toronto and screened at Hawaii International Film Festival.

E.oni opens her film with a man running up the stairs to reach the rooftop terrace where a woman in wedding gown leans on a fence and smokes a cigarette. Loud music on piano and choir vocalising and a drone shot of downtown Seoul send the rest of the action into a series of flashbacks marked by numbers suggesting our protagonists’ age, starting when the two of them meet as a part of the same large French language-majoring group at college under the mentorship of the professor Olivier (Salim Benoit).

Jae-hee (Kim Go-eun) is a free-spirited, some would say “wild” girl. Although an over-achiever by nature, she is concentrated more on having fun than on studying. After all, she lived in Paris and is quite fluent in French. Contrary to her, Heung-soo (Steve Noh, also known as Noh Shang-hyun) is an aimless and timid guy who chose to delay his military service by studying French, drawn to the language because of Albert Camus’ “Stanger”. He seems to be the only guy in the group who is not in love with Jae-hee, and there is a good reason for it: he is gay, but he hides it even from his mother.

After an incident draws them closer, they become close friends and he moves to her apartment. They confide in each other and navigate their love lives together, while raising suspicions that they are a couple. Although their adventures might seem goofy and funny at times, they can also take a darker turn. After all, Korean society is still conservative, patriarchal and with strict hierarchy, while the acceptance of either LGBTQ+ people or male-female friendships as such is not implied.

Although the story has the clear beginning and ending, the seemingly integral choice of things in-between taken from the source novel can prove to be a bit troublesome, especially for fitting into a single movie. Although it is quite generous in the terms of runtime, the material simply seems a better fit for a one-season TV show. E.oni’s opting for a few clubbing montage sequences early on, kinetic camerawork (executed by the DoP Kim Hyoung-ju) and quick cutting saves some of the runtime, but seems a bit counter-intuitive for a romance drama. Later on, when the comedic elements evaporate, the style also gets calmer, and more fitting for the serious topics the novel, the script and the film try to explore.

The two leading actors remain on the centre stage of the film for the whole time, playing their characters evolving the best they can. Still, they are better at nailing the basics of them laid out early on than at getting to the characters’ emotional depth and complexity as the film moves to the more serious territory. Kim Go-eun, of “A Muse” (2012) fame and recently seen in “Exhuma” (2024), enjoys walking on the wild side and defying the strict and patriarchal society as Jae-hee, while Steve Noh, one of the stars of 2015 “Seoul Searching”, plays Heung-soo with tact and just the needed amount of swagger.

In the end, “Love in the Big City” is a film that opens certain aspects of contemporary life in Seoul and Korea in general from the point of view of young(er) people. It might not prove to be a seminal piece of work, but it is still decent.



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