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poster of Nobody's Daughter Haewon
Rating: 6.3/10 by 53 users

Nobody's Daughter Haewon (2013)

Hae-won, a college student, wants to end her secret affair with her professor, Seong-jun. Feeling depressed after bidding farewell to her mother who is set to immigrate to Canada the next day, Hae-won seeks out Seong-jun again after a long time. That day, they run into her classmates at a restaurant and their relationship gets revealed. Hae-won gets more agitated and Seong-jun makes an extreme suggestion to run away together.

Directing:
  • Hong Sang-soo
  • Lee Jea-han
Writing:
  • Hong Sang-soo
Stars:
Release Date: Thu, Feb 28, 2013

Rating: 6.3/10 by 53 users

Alternative Title:
他與她的白日夢 - TW
Haewon Et Les Hommes - FR
Nugu-ui Ttal-do Anin Haewon - KR
Nobody's Daughter Hae-Won - KR
Haewon und die Männer - DE
Nobodys Daughter Haewon - US
Хэ-вон — ничья дочь - RU
Хэвон — ничья дочь - RU
白日夢女兒 - HK
Nobody’s daughter Haewon - KR

Country:
South Korea
Language:
한국어/조선말
Runtime: 01 hour 31 minutes
Budget: $0
Revenue: $0

Plot Keyword: daughter, professor

CinemaSerf

The eponymous girl (Jung Eun-chae) is struggling to come to terms with her mother's imminent emigration to Canada. The day before her departure, the pair meet to spend the day together and when they part, the daughter starts to pine a little. She decides that she wants to meet her former (married) university professor "Seongjun" (Lee Sun-kyun) with whom she'd had clandestine affair and their meeting starts to make both realise what they had, miss and want for their respective - or maybe even conjoined - futures. It's all perfectly watchable but the story is as old as the hills, neither the acting nor the writing really set the thing alight and by midway through I wasn't quite sure whether I cared enough about either of them to worry about the morality of a relationship between a teaching professional and his impressionable student. It's a melodrama-cum-soap opera that does come, slightly, to an head when the couple disclose their former relationship to her friends and to her only other sexual partner but even then, I'm not sure how convinced I was by their responses and attitudes. It's not that I'm being prudish about their sex lives, it's just that I found neither character remotely engaging. The whole premiss might be supposed to be allegorical about the state of Korean nationhood and/or of reconciling their past and the present but it's the sheer banality of the thing that renders it impotent and any development of her troubled, self-obsessed, character is largely left on the sidelines.


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