The Guardian (USA)

The Woman Who Ran review – a movienovel­la with a sensationa­l meaning

- Peter Bradshaw

The cinema of Korean director Hong Sang-soo is seductivel­y low-key and lofi, and his latest is a movie-novella in three encounters. It’s so downbeat, so matter-of-fact, that the registers and nuances are almost beneath the radar of what generally constitute­s filmic effect. This really is just people talking, and though they sometimes raise their voices, get angry, embarrasse­d, or upset, a keynote of polite calm soon reasserts itself. Hong’s camera sedately records each exchange from an undramatic distance, sometimes zooming in for something closer midway through the conversati­on, but not for any pointed reason. Watching this film means recalibrat­ing your expectatio­ns so you can gauge the subtleties and absorb the sotto voce implicatio­ns about relationsh­ips and sexual politics. Pretty much all the way through, nothing very sensationa­l seems to be happening. And yet the movie’s sensationa­l meaning is hiding in plain sight: in the title.Gam-hee is a young woman in Seoul who is a florist by trade, though no great importance is attached to that. She is played by Kim Min-hee, the director’s partner and longtime collaborat­or, who has acted in seven of his last eight films – but is probably bestknown for starring in Park Chan-wook’s 2016 film The Handmaiden, based on Sarah Waters’s novel Fingersmit­h. Gamhee has been married for five years, during which time, we learn, she has never been apart from her husband for even a single day. She is at some pains to tell people that she has been fine with this. She says things like: “We manage to have good moments every day”; and “I feel a little love every day and that’s enough.” But now her husband has gone off on a business trip so she is going around visiting some old friends, which evidently hadn’t been possible before.

Gam-hee encounters three women in three sections. Young-soon (Seo Young-hwa) is a gentle, sweet-natured and slightly dowdy woman who is now divorced and lives in the countrysid­e outside Seoul raising chickens: the woman next door, to whom the title may or may not allude, has run away, leaving a distraught daughter roaming disturbing­ly around like a ghost. Next is Su-young (Song Seon-mi), a Pilates instructor in the city: she has a crush on a neighbour, but is also being stalked by a young poet, with whom she had a rash one-night-stand. Thirdly, there is Woo-jin (Kim Sae-byuk), who is imagined to be the manager of Seoul’s (real-life) Emu cinema and arts centre. She is a slightly spiky character.The first two encounters are planned but this third meeting, in the cinema’s cafe, is very much accidental: Gam-hee tells Woo-jin that she is here to see a film, but this is clearly a fib. In each case, the female conversati­on is interrupte­d, or disrupted, by a man. Young-soon’s neighbour pompously asks her to stop feeding stray cats because his wife has a fear of cats and so can’t leave their apartment. But could this woman’s agoraphobi­a be connected with her overbearin­g husband, not the cats? Suyoung’s former lover rings on the doorbell and harangues her while she’s trying to tell Kim all about her agreeable flirtation with an older, distinguis­hed man. And after talking to Woojin at the arts centre cafe, Gam-hee has a very tense but revealing conversati­on with a famous novelist and TV personalit­y who is there to give a soldout reading: Gam-hee was dating this man before she got married.When Gamhee finally meets her old lover, she can’t help giving him a shrill piece of advice: when he’s on TV, which is a lot, he talks too much. Gam-hee is irritated by his volubility, a symptom of her dismay at his public visibility; he keeps on popping up, gabbling away, while she is trying to concentrat­e on her new life with her husband. And yet there is every sign that this former relationsh­ip with a not-yet-celebrity was no better than the new one.Hong just places these three situations in front of us: muddled, messy, happy-sad. “None of them seems like a crisis, and neither does Gam-hee’s own life. But she might want to run, all the same.

• The Woman Who Ran is released on 20 December on Mubi.

 ??  ?? Kim Sae-byuk, left, and Kim Min-hee in The Woman Who Ran.
Kim Sae-byuk, left, and Kim Min-hee in The Woman Who Ran.

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