In Korean with English & Chinese Subtitles
Genre: Comedy/Romance
Director: Jang Yoo-jung
Cast: Lim Soo-jung, Gong Yoo, Chun Ho-jin,
Jeong Su-kyung
RunTime: 1 hr 52 mins
Released By: Encore Films & GV
Rating: PG
Official Website:
Opening Day: 24 February 2011
Synopsis: Ki-jun starts an agency that helps
people locate their long lost first loves and Ji-woo becomes
his first client. She is dragged there by her worried father
who learns that Ji-woo is still hung up on Kim Jong-wook,
a man she fell in love with on her trip to India in her early
twenties. But she’s reluctant to go looking for her
first love after all these years--the mere thought of it even
scares her to bits.
But Ji-woo’s “extremely uncooperative attitude” doesn’t stop Ki-jun from bringing in all his resources in order to find Kim Jong-wook. Ki-jun is determined to successfully accomplish the first assignment for his detective agency. In order to identify the face of Ji-woo’s long lost first love, the two travel all around the country and come face-to-face with a smorgasbord of Kim Jong-wooks.
After days on end of little success in the search for Kim Jong-wook, the agency receives a single phone call of fate. Kim Jong-wook himself, inquired at Ki-jun’s agency, in the hope of finding Ji-woo! Ki-jun tells Ji-woo the good news, but realized he has feelings for her.
Movie
Review:
If you are one of the early adopters of the Korean wave, you
will probably find this lead actor immensely familiar. You’re
right, he’s Gong Yoo (as Ki-jun). He was the leading
actor in one of the popular drama series in Singapore, Coffee
Prince. However this time, his role in this movie is not as
demanding as his role in the drama. The focus is on his comedic
side. Well, this movie is after all a rom-com. Co-actress
Im Soo-Jung (as Ji-woo), though less heard of, is equally
dazzling. She has pulled off a good performance of a woman
who finds her first love hard to forget and showed a good
balance of emotion display. Also, her role in this movie also
exemplifies her versatility.
This movie was adapted from a Korean musical play which has
been running since 2006. Hence, it is easy to pick parts of
the movie that actually work better on the stage than on the
big screen. That being said, the cinematography of the movie
still deserves some credit. The colourful and vibrant culture
in India was very beautifully captured, from the opening scene
to the flashbacks. Although the recall was exciting to watch,
it was a pity that there was a lack of heart-tugging emotions.
When we talk about first love, isn’t there a tinge of
pain in our hearts? Then again, these scenes are fitting and
characterize her encounter with her first love, colourful
and jovial.
Having love as the main theme of the movie, there are also
some sub themes that were in the movie. These sub themes are
not particularly helpful in helping one to understand the
narrative. It even seems that it has such a mix of themes,
in desperate hopes that people will identify with at least
part of it. The narrative became a little confusing in past
mid-way of the movie because many things were left unexplained.
The significance of the events were also not emphasized, hence
the confusion.
However, the saving grace of the movie is the comedic elements.
One can expect a pretty good laugh in the cinema. It has picked
up a little on the pop culture and people’s fascination
over the Korean wave. These elements, combined with pretty
witty dialogues, have brought about some good entertainment.
As of the purpose of all movie-goers, going to a movie is
a time to be transported momentarily to another time and space,
and also get entertained. Therefore in this respect, it is
pretty enticing to watch.
As
meaningful as it is towards the ending, it serves as a careful
reminder to all: to live in the present and not in the shadows
of the past; whether it is towards love, life or even achievements.
What is important is not what we used to have, but what we
have now!
Movie
Rating:
  
(Wait
no longer… carpe diem!)
Review by Tho Shu Ling
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