Was this review helpful to you?
In my own personal opinion....
In my own personal opinion i will give this a full 10. Now there is a reason for that. While films like these would not suit people who are use to more action, more story or even more dialogue, that is because there isn't much of any of that in this movie. However for people with mindsets like my own that find the joys in just sitting back, observing and seeing how people live their lives this movie is their cup of tea. The light dialogue forces you to pay more attention to their faces, their emotions, the thoughts going on in their heads and trying to figure out the characters next thought vs the next move they will make. But that is were the double edge sword hits. You become so focused on the emotions displayed that you kind of lose track of the signs that are giving you the clear giveaways to what is really happening and you miss it completely until BAM... it hits you like a truck.Now for spoiler reasons i wont elaborate to much on what i mean there but i will say that if you going into watching this film expecting to see much talking, don't cause you will be sorely disappointed. However if you are looking for a film that has a strong sense of both obvious but hidden emotional moment with a really good cast and an ending that is sure to knock the wind out your lungs in half a second, Its one i highly recommend it.
It's a film that is hard to write a review on without giving away to much of the emotional aspect if i elaborate to much on what is happening so i will be keeping this nice and simple, just explaining where i think the public appeal would fall under in terms of who would be more likely to watch it and who might be more disappointed with it.
Was this review helpful to you?
This review may contain spoilers
You need to feel this raw !
This movie is for a specific type of people ! this is raw and painful, yet beautiful!This movie completely took me by surprise. I was just as shocked as the characters, and it wasn’t until the very end that the sadness truly hit me like a punch straight to the stomach. I honestly don’t think anyone can fully prepare for how heartbreaking this story is. If I can give one piece of advice: don’t read reviews. Don’t look up explanations. Just watch it. It needs to be felt raw.
Plot**
The story follows Jae Hoon, a once-successful fund manager whose world begins collapsing when his company goes bankrupt. Already overwhelmed and defeated, he impulsively books a one-way ticket to Australia, where his wife and son have been living for the past two years for their son’s education. You would think he would surprise them, run into their arms but instead, when he arrives, he sees something that stops him. His wife and son look… happy. Happier than he expected. And rather than announcing his return, he chooses to stay hidden and observe them from a distance.
Spoilers ahead***
Jae Hoon isn’t just a man who lost his job. He’s a man whose entire identity was built around being the provider. His success, his worth, his role as a husband and father all of it was tied to money and stability. When his company collapses, it’s not only financial ruin. It’s ego. It’s pride. It’s the fear of being seen as a failure.
Watching him observe his family from a distance was heartbreaking in a very specific way. He isn’t just broken, he’s displaced. He looks at his wife smiling, lighter, freer than she ever seemed in Korea, and you can almost see the thought forming in his mind: Was I the weight? That realisation is cruel!! He starts to understand that while he was busy earning money for them, he wasn’t emotionally present. And now he’s standing outside their life, quite literally.
What makes this film so powerful is how internal it is. Lee Byung-hun delivers one of those performances where the silence speaks louder than dialogue. His eyes do most of the storytelling. You see the jealousy, the denial, the fragile hope that maybe he misunderstood… and then the slow acceptance. It’s the kind of acting that feels almost intrusive, like you’re watching someone’s private unravelling.
I think what truly breaks him and us is the realisation that while he was busy building financial security, his family was building a life. And that life, without him constantly present, seems lighter. Happier. The film doesn’t scream its message. It shows it quietly, forcing you to sit with the discomfort and draw your own conclusions.
The contrast between gloomy, tense memories of Korea and the bright, open atmosphere of Australia visually mirrors his emotional state. In his memories, everything feels heavy. In Australia, everything feels alive except him. He stands there in his suit, rigid and out of place, like a man who belongs to a different world.
This isn’t a loud movie. It’s not dramatic in the usual way. There aren’t many long confrontations or dialogues. It’s quiet. Observational. And that silence makes it even more painful.
There are layers of sadness here. The sadness of a man losing his job. The sadness of suspicion. The sadness of watching the people you love live well without you. And beneath all of that, the deeper ache: the understanding that emotional presence might have mattered more than material provision.
By the end, the truth that unfold explode and devastation is makes it unforgettable. This was so painful!
Was this review helpful to you?
the duration of the movie was 1 hr. & 37 min.
1 hr. & 15 min was all i can bear in that torture
this is the first muted movie i have ever seen
no conversation ... no events... very very very slow motion .. monotonous ... lukewarm & provoking
what was the significance behind ??
1 hr & 25 min no events then the last 10 min he cumulates every thing to discover a provoking surprise
thank god i didn't break the screen >_<
Was this review helpful to you?



