As far as the critical discourse of Korean cinema goes, few filmmakers have a more commanding presence than Hong Sang-soo, whose flowing narratives often feel like chapters in the same grand story. In a sense, his body of work reminds me of some of the 19th century’s most prolific French writers, such as Honoré de Balzac and Émile Zola whose main outputs consisted of
The Human Comedy and the
Rougon-Macquart cycles, which consisted of 91 and 20 volumes respectively. In these exceedingly rich opuses, the French wordsmiths crafted dense worlds, which mirrored the societies they lived in and repeated the same themes and concerns through similar stories and with large casts of revolving characters.
Hong’s output is much less concerned with the high-flown
dramatics of the far-reaching stories of these previously mentioned
collections. Indeed his films,
especially for an uninitiated viewer, offer a vague semblance of banality and rarely
fall into the trap of narrative twists or plot contrivances, choosing to focus
on the everyday rather than the extremes of life. What he shares with Balzac and Zola is a keen interest in
realism. For the French writers
this style was labeled naturalism and often explored social injustice and the
inescapable force of heredity in the shaping of human characters. While Hong’s films do not share those
specific traits, they do exhibit a similarly acute infatuation with
repetition. People make the same
choices and mistakes over and over again.
It’s a funny thing about reviews of Hong’s work but more than most other
filmmakers, his whole career tends to be put under the microscope, likely
because his films so resemble one another.
But that’s enough about Hong’s previous films for the moment,
let’s talk about his new one
The Day He
Arrives, which is his 12th.
For his new feature, Hong has opted to shoot in black and white,
something he hasn’t done since his third film
Virgin Stripped Bare By Her Bachelors (2000), which really put him
on the map (so much for not talking about his other films). The story takes place over a few days
and follows Seong-joon (Yoo Joon-sang), a filmmaker on hiatus, as he briefly
returns to Seoul to meet up with old friends and girlfriends and make new
acquaintances, mostly during sessions of eating and drinking.
Repetition is an integral part of Hong’s new film, there are
few actions or pieces of dialogue that are not replayed during its brief
running time (79 minutes). Eating,
drinking, or smoking accompanies every scene and it’s not for nothing. Typically, these three actions are
endlessly repeated throughout our lives (unless you quit drinking or smoking)
irrespective of the change we may perceive in ourselves and others. As Hong’s characters shuffle about the
same bars and restaurants and engage in cyclical discussions about their
concerns for the past, present, and future, their layers of outward calm
gradually come undone and we get closer to the raw emotions and neuroses at
their core.
Early on in The Day He
Arrives Seong-joon drops in drunk and unannounced on his ex-girlfriend,
whom he hasn’t seen for a few years.
It’s an emotional moment as we are first confronted with her anger at
his having seemingly abandoned her, but soon after it becomes clear that they
both still have very strong feelings for one another. After sharing a tender moment he leaves but not before
stating that they should refrain from engaging in any further communication. Nevertheless, she texts him occasionally
throughout the rest of the film, while he embarks on an amorous encounter with
a bar owner who is her doppelganger (played by the same actress, Kim Bo-kyeong). It is never explained why they split
but the fact that there is some reason that they can’t be together is alluded
to.
It is said that throughout life we tend to repeat our
previous mistakes. Seong-joon is
clearly hiding from something as he dodders around the countryside on an
indefinite break from filmmaking and his return to Seoul forces him to confront
these past troubles. Though since
we are not privy to very much information, it is hard to say to what degree he
does this. He abandoned both his
girlfriend and career as he ran away from Seoul and it is possible he did so
through some fear of commitment or growing up. On his return to the capital he is frequently asked when he
will make his next film, his answers are uniformly vague and noncommittal. After bedding his girlfriend’s
lookalike, he leaves her in the morning, offering her much same words as he did
to his ex a few days earlier, that they shouldn’t see each other anymore.
Hong seems to have settled more and more into his idiosyncratic
style of filmmaking as his films have gotten progressively funnier. The
Day He Arrives is frequently hilarious and while it has a fairly tight
structure it seems effortless and relaxed, this is in large part due to the
performances that he draws from his leads (especially Yoo and Kim Sang-joon),
which are very naturalistic. He
also plays around a little bit with the mise-en-scene, something he does with
most of his films, like the freezeframe dialogues that punctuate HaHaHa (2010). During a number of the midshots, most of which take place at
drinking or eating establishments with two characters sitting on one side of a
table facing another across from them, Hong quickly zooms in, pushing the
protagonists to the very edges of the frame. The effect is deliberately jarring and the claustrophobic
reframing creates a more intense atmosphere which often signals the beginning
of a confrontation.
For me
The Day He
Arrives turned into a fairly personal experience as much of it hit close to home and I am sure that I am not the only person who experienced
this. Hong Sang-soo is an artist
who trades in the everyday; his currency is the prosaic minutiae of the
exchanges and relationships that make up our lives. Just like the great French naturalists, he succeeds in
burrowing down to our core by forcing us to look inwards, again and again,
until we recognize ourselves in a simple shrug of the shoulders or a little
white lie. I look forward to the
next volume in Hong’s oeuvre, to experience his wit and craft anew and perhaps
to discover a little bit more about myself.
★★★★★
The Day He Arrives opens in New York on April 20 at Lincoln Plaza Cinemas before expanding across the US. Hong Sang-soo's latest is being distributed by
Cinema Guild, which will announce new markets on its
playdates page, so make sure to check back to see if it plays near you.
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