
Nora and Hae Sung, two deeply connected childhood friends, are wrested apart after Nora’s family emigrates from South Korea. Twenty years later, they are reunited for one fateful week as they confront notions of love and destiny.
Though stories about “what if” romances are not alien for audiences, director Celine Song introduces herself to the mainstream with a magnificent film that’s beautifully told through her gentle eye and script. The style is filled with meditative melancholy, exploring the beauty of fate and what does and doesn’t come out of it, and that happiness and destiny can also mean loss and regret — this is heavily indicated through Greta Lee, who’s lovely performance inhabits lots of emotions but with great restraint in her profoundly kind and poignant expression of the character. Teo Yoo is also excellent as Hae Sung, and John Magaro is delightful as Nora’s husband who deals with this interesting situation for him with patience, understanding, and goodness.
The beautiful wide shots that linger on the characters express the energy they feel within the space they inhabit, and the calming score is simply unforgettable. Within moments of the film, the simplistic yet intimate style pulls you into the love, pain, and reflection these characters experience. It’s one of the most enchanting, touching movies about love and connection I’ve ever seen, deserving a mention in the same breath as Her and Before Sunrise. Yet this one may not just make you reflect on romance, but about those special people in your life who may come in and out but change your life forever. It’s one of those films that digs to the deepest points of your heart and never leaves and may leave you as filled up as heartbroken, and may end up being a defining film for 2023.
