The Way Home (2002 film)
The Way Home | |
---|---|
Korean name | |
Hangul | 집으로 |
Revised Romanization | Jibeuro |
McCune–Reischauer | Chibŭro |
Directed by | Lee Jeong-hyang |
Written by | Lee Jeong-hyang |
Produced by | Hwang Woo-hyun Hwang Jae-woo |
Starring | Kim Eul-boon Yoo Seung-ho |
Cinematography | Yoon Heung-sik |
Edited by | Kim Jae-bum Kim Sang-bum |
Music by | Kim Dae-heung Kim Yang-hee |
Production companies | Paramount Classics Tube Entertainment |
Distributed by | CJ Entertainment (South Korea) Paramount Pictures (United States) |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 87 minutes |
Countries | South Korea United States |
Language | Korean |
Box office | US$24,952,738[1] |
The Way Home (Korean: 집으로...) is a 2002 South Korean drama film written and directed by Lee Jeong-hyang. It tells the heart-warming story about a grandmother and her city-born grandson who comes to live with her in a rural village. The film was named best picture at South Korea's 39th annual Grand Bell (Daejong) Awards[2] and was the second-highest grossing homegrown film in South Korea in 2002. It was released on DVD and VHS in 2003 by Paramount Classics.[3]
Plot
[edit]Seven-year old Sang-woo (Yoo Seung-ho) is taken to the Korean countryside to stay with his 78-year-old mute, but not deaf, grandmother (Kim Eul-boon) while his mother searches for a new job in Seoul.
Sang-woo, a spoiled city boy, is unimpressed by the unsophisticated nature of his poor grandmother's home, which has neither electricity nor running water. He acts rudely to his grandmother, ignoring her at times and calling her a byungshin, or "retard," at others.
Sang-woo continues to attempt to acclimatize to his unfamiliar environment. One of the grandmother's neighbors is a hard-working country boy who attempts to become friends with Sang-woo, but is rebuffed. The other is a young girl who Sang-Woo is enamored by, but she is more interested in the country boy.
Meanwhile, Sang-woo's grandmother is patient and hardworking, spending her time caring for her melons and attempting to care for Sang-woo despite his disdain. Sang-woo's Game Boy runs out of batteries so he asks his grandmother for money for new ones. But she is poor and has none. But when she has none, in an effort to coerce her, Sang-woo insults her, throws away her shoes, breaks one of her vases, and draws graffiti on her house walls.
When this ploy fails to extract money from his grandmother, Sang-woo steals her ornamental hairpin to trade for batteries. He attempts to trade the silver hairpin at a local shop but the shopkeeper, a friend of his grandmother's, hits him on the head and sends him home.
Sang-woo complains about eating home-cooked food and demands his grandmother provide him with Kentucky Fried Chicken. In a well-intended but misunderstood attempt to please him, she purchases a live chicken from the market and prepares a home-made boiled chicken dish for Sang-woo. When Sang-woo sees it he becomes upset and cries. The next morning, his grandmother becomes ill. Sang-woo serves her the remaining chicken while caring for her. He also returns his grandmother's hairpin.
One day, Sang-woo gets up early and goes with his grandmother to the market where he sees how hard his grandmother persuades passers-by to buy her vegetables. After a long day at the market she takes Sang-woo to a shop and buys him noodles and new shoes. When they are about to board the bus home, Sang-woo asks his grandma to buy him a Choco Pie. She trades a melon for several Choco Pies for Sang-woo. However, when they are about to board the bus back to their home, Sang-Woo tells her he wants to ride alone as the girl he likes is also on board. The grandmother tries to get Sang-Woo to take the rest of the produce with him but he refuses. Sang-woo reaches home well before his grandmother, and feels remorseful when he realizes that his grandmother has had to walk back from town carrying their purchases.
Sang-woo gradually develops sympathy towards his grandmother and their relationship begins to deepen. As she is unable to read or write, he starts to make some simple greeting cards to him to express his love and gratitude. so she has some letters from him. His overall attitude improves and he becomes more humble, eventually apologizing to the neighborhood boy and seeking his friendship. Finally Sang-woo's mother returns, and takes him back to Seoul. His depth of feeling for his grandmother is revealed when the bus leaves and he leaps to the back window to wave his tearful farewells. The film closes with the grandmother continuing to live alone in the thatched-roof house but with the letters of love from her grandson.
An ending credit notes that the film is dedicated to all grandmothers around the world.
Cast
[edit]Principal
[edit]- Kim Eul-boon as Grandmother
- Yoo Seung-ho as Sang-woo
Supporting
[edit]- Dong Hyo-hee as Sang-woo's mother
- Min Kyung-hyun as Cheol-yi, country boy, neighbor of the grandmother
- Im Eun-kyung as Hae-yeon
Production
[edit]The film was filmed in and around Jeetongma, North Gyeongsang Province, South Korea.
Reception
[edit]The film received generally positive reviews from both Western and Korean critics. The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported that 75% of critics gave the film positive reviews, based on 56 reviews.[4] Steven Rea from the Philadelphia Inquirer gave the film 3.5 stars out of 4 saying that "Jeong-Hyang Lee's film is deceptively simple, deeply satisfying."[5]
Many critics praised the style of the movie as well as the acting of the inexperienced Kim Eul-boon who at 78, had not only never acted before, but never even seen a film. The film went on to win the Best Film and Best screenplay awards at the Grand Bell Awards,[6] the Oscar's equivalent in South Korea. It was also nominated for Best Asian Film at the 22nd Hong Kong Film Awards, but lost to My Sassy Girl, another South Korean film.
References
[edit]- ^ "The Way Home (2002)". Box Office Mojo. IMDb. Retrieved 2021-07-07.
- ^ Paquet2002-05-28T04:05:00+01:00, Darcy. "The Way Home wins Korea's top Grand Bell award". Screen. Retrieved 2023-04-17.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ "The Way Home". Paramount Classics. Archived from the original on 2004-04-02. Retrieved 6 March 2008.
- ^ "The Way Home (2002)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved 2021-07-07.
- ^ Rea, Steven (2003-01-24). "A winning tale of a boy won over". Philadelphia Inquirer. Archived from the original on 2016-02-06.
- ^ "Grand Bell Awards (Daejong)". korean-drama-guide.com. Retrieved 2021-07-07.
External links
[edit]- The Way Home at the Korean Movie Database (in Korean)
- The Way Home at IMDb
- 2002 films
- 2002 drama films
- Films set in the 21st century
- CJ Entertainment films
- Paramount Vantage films
- Best Picture Grand Bell Award winners
- South Korean drama films
- American drama films
- Films about disability
- Films about grandparent–grandchild relationships
- Grand Prize Paeksang Arts Award (Film) winners
- 2000s South Korean films
- 2000s American films
- 2000s Korean-language films
- Korean-language drama films