"Beyond The Years"
("Cheong Nyeong hak") (South Korea)
A Bear Entertainment, Prime Entertainment release and presentation of a
Kino 2 Pictures production. Produced by Kim Jong-weon. Executive
producers, Heo Dae-yeong, Baek Jong-jin. Directed by Im Kwon-taek.
Screenplay, Im, Yi Chung-jun, based on stories by Yi Chung-jun.
Dong-ho - Jo Jae-hyeon
Song-hwa - Oh Jeong-hae
Dan-shim - Oh Seung-eun
Yong-taek - Yu Seung-ryong
Yoo Bong - Im Jin-taek
Dong-ho, as a boy - Yun Je-weon
Song-hwa, as a girl - Hwang Shi-on
Yong-taek's mother - Bang Eun-mi
Baek-sa - Jang Min-ho
Handsomely mounted but deliberately paced and somewhat
old-fashioned, South Korean vet Im Kwon-taek's 100th helming effort,
"Beyond the Years," reps a return to the folk music traditions that
have frequently informed his work. Adapted from the same material that
inspired his 1993 drama "Sopyonje," and telling essentially the same
story, picture portrays the tortured lives of brother-and-sister
musicians trained to perform the epic Korean poems known as pansori.
Refined tone will likely attract fest programmers, though offshore
commercial prospects look downbeat. On home turf, the April 12 release
crashed and burned, with a mere 66,000 admissions in its first week.
Yarn
begins in the present-day as fiftysomething drummer Dong-ho (Jo
Jae-hyeon) arrives in Seonhak village. Compared with his childhood,
when the village boasted a small but lively population and a
magnificent river surrounding a spectacular mountain, Seonhak is now
destitute, the waterway dammed.
Taking a room at the local inn,
Dong-ho encounters Yong-taek (Yu Seung-ryong), a surly survivor from
his past, and joins him for a drink. Pic is mostly dramatizations of
their alcohol-fueled conversation about events since they first met
years earlier.
As revealed in a flashback to 1956, drum protege
Dong-ho (Yun Je-weon), accompanied by his singing sister, Song-hwa
(Hwang Shi-on), and their master-musician father, Yu-bong (Im
Jin-taek), first visited Seonhak during the kids' childhood. At that
time, smitten with Song-hwa, Yong-taek offers the girl some taffy.
Possessive of his sister, Dong-ho begins a scuffle that brings disgrace
on himself, his sister and their father.
Years later, tired of
the endemic poverty of a roaming minstrel's life, and both jealous and
disgusted by his father's unwholesome attentions to Song-hwa (Oh
Jeong-hae), Dong-ho lands a gig with a theatrical troupe and, though
still pre-occupied with his sister, begins an affair with the troupe
owner's lover, Dan-shim (Oh Seung-eun).
When Dan-shim becomes
pregnant, Dong-ho's obsession with his sister is rekindled. He abandons
his lover to search for Song-hwa throughout South Korea.
Through
a variety of sources, Dong-ho fills in the blanks of Song-hwa's life,
especially how, in his absence, she had been blinded by her father, who
gave her a dangerous herb during an illness. However, Song-hwa's vocal
prowess was heightened by the affliction, fueling suspicions that
Yu-bong's error was deliberate.
While the lives of the two
siblings occasionally intersect, Dong-ho largely learns of Song-hwa's
joys and miseries at a remove. Unable to reunite with his sister or
find meaning in his own existence, Dong-ho's life becomes a series of
restless travels that duplicate the itinerant routine he once hoped to
escape.
Main thesp Jo brings a simmering intensity to Dong-ho, while pansori
singer-cum-actress Oh Jeong-hae, reprising the same role she played in
"Sopyonje," manages to imbue the symbolic ideal of Song-hwa with a
tangible personality. Oh Seung-eun is convincing as Dan-shim, but her
few singing scenes -- revoiced -- are less successful.
Im's
helming is classy but conservative. While direction is precise, the
helmer's reserved style lacks the passion that could have widened the
movie's appeal, and the spirit that made the original "Sopyonje" so
involving. In a frustrating contrast to the energy he displayed in
"Chunhyang," Im's interest in the traditional songs here seems more
intellectual than visceral.
Visually, the pic has an antiquated
appearance that makes it resemble a rediscovered treasure from Im's
earlier catalogue. Beguiling score by Japanese composer Kunihiko Ryo is
simpatico with the traditional Korean folk songs that are the yarn's
lifeblood. Other tech credits are fine. Original Korean title means
"Thousand-Year Crane," as in the bird.
Camera (color), Jeong Il-seong; editor, Park Sun-deok; music,
Kunihiko Ryo; art director, Ju Byeong-do; costume designer, Lee
Hye-ryeon; sound (Dolby Digital), Lee Byeong-ha. Reviewed at CGV Cinema
4, Jeonju, South Korea, April 27, 2007. Running time: 95 MIN.
With: Ahn Byeong-gyeong, Gweon Tae-weon.
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