Jayu buin (1956) Poster

(1956)

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7/10
Melodrama of lust and love
simon-13035 November 2007
It's all happening here. A bored couple have various extramarital flirtations in a torrid atmosphere of dodgy financial dealings and lust-filled entanglements. Meanwhile the family as a family is rather left to look after itself. The acting, given that it is melodrama, is fairly good and the settings are entirely convincing. You might not like the Korean (or indeed any) version of America in the fifties but it is believable and indeed fascinating. The plot bounces along from one flirtation or crisis to another, while the female characters alternately support each other or eye each other competitively. There are resonances from a culture undergoing change and real issues and dilemmas, like all good melodramas, for the characters. What is the role of women? Is life about appearances or something more? What is the balance between thinking of the future and enjoying yourself while you can? Who is exploiting who in business, employment and relationships? Perhaps we're all using each other?
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6/10
Marital Turbulance in the Aftermath of the Korean War
Uriah4320 May 2023
This film begins just a few years after the end of the Korean War with a woman by the name of "Oh Seon-yeong" (Na-yeong An) asking her husband "Jang Tae-yun" (Am Park) whether it would be okay with him if she accepts a job offer at a nearby store in Seoul. Considering that he works full time as a professor at a local university and that they are raising a young child, he doesn't particularly like the idea, but he eventually relents and she eagerly starts working not too long afterward. It's during this time that one of her friends, "Choi Yun-ju" (Kyeong-hie No) encourages her to join a lavish social club which she believes will boost her self-esteem. To her chagrin, during the very first meeting she is told that the club is hosting a dancing festivity in the near future and she is subsequently pressured into attending. Not knowing how to dance, she bashfully asks her next-door neighbor, "Shin Chun-ho") Min Lee to teach her. Being somewhat of a ladies' man, he quickly accepts her proposal with the secret intention of eventually seducing her at the appropriate time. Meanwhile, Oh Seon-yeong's boss, "Han Tae-suk" (Dong-won Kim) also becomes attracted to her and uses his position to further his own romantic ambitions. Considering that her husband hasn't paid much attention to her for quite a while, Oh Seon-yeong is quite pleased at this sudden interest in her by both Shin Chun-ho and Han Tae-suk and, before she knows it, she is spending a great deal of time with one or the other. Likewise, her husband has also recently met an attractive young woman named "Park Eun-hee (Mi-hie Yang) and he is also feeling somewhat enamored of her as well. The problem, however, is that the longer both Oh Seon-yeong and Jang Tae-yun spend with their new acquaintances, the more their marriage suffers--and soon both of them will have to make a choice whether to stay married or not. Now, rather than reveal any more, I will just say that this film tried to encapsulate some of the social pressures South Korean society experienced during the immediate aftermath of the Korean War with the integration of Western concepts featuring quite prominently in that regard. I dare say that, considering that the South Korean film industry was in its infancy during this time, this effort turned out relatively well, in my opinion. Admittedly, I didn't particularly care for the rather ambiguous ending but, even so, I enjoyed this movie for the most part and I have rated it accordingly. Slightly above average.
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An absorbing portrait of thwarted material and sexual ambition
philosopherjack7 June 2024
Warning: Spoilers
Hyeong-mo Han's ironically-titled 1956 film Madame Freedom isn't as potently accomplished as some of the similarly-themed Japanese films of its period, but it's an absorbing portrait of thwarted material and sexual ambition. The unfulfilled Madame Oh, married to a self-absorbed academic, mostly stuck at home with her young son, takes a job in a store selling high-end imported goods, rapidly getting drawn then into liaisons with other men and involvement in shady financial schemes, such that she's almost never home; the husband meanwhile has his own, much more restrained quasi-flirtation with a young woman who attends a nighttime grammar class he teaches for a group of typists. The film focuses mainly on a narrow, relatively privileged echelon of Korean society, defined in part by the perceived superiority of Western products and culture (standards like Someone to Watch Over Me and Autumn Leaves dominate the soundtrack) and material striving, a reference point which allows its female characters a new-found confidence and sense of achievement, but at significant personal risk. The film gains much from the withholding quality of lead actress Jeong-rim Kim, her almost mask-like appearance contributing to a productive ambiguity: even as she blatantly flirts with and makes arrangements to meet with other men, it's unclear how far her desire truly stretches (some of the quietly saddest moments involve the little boy, perpetually sitting alone at his little desk). The ending however leaves no doubt that if her husband, now aware of her conduct, allows her to remain in the home, it will only be as a properly dutiful and compliant mother and wife, in this context a fate at least preferable to that of some of her business associates. The film slows down along the way for several musical numbers, often again Hollywood-influenced, including a charming if drastically out of place "mambo" number.
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