SYNOPSIS
A story about a middle-class, middle-aged woman who falls in love with the author of the bestselling novel, Blue Lips, this film, like the 50s melodrama, A Lady of Freedom, depicts a woman¡¯s mid-life crisis. Protagonist Sun-Ah shifts from being her husband¡¯s private property to an exploding bomb resisting his oppression. If the husband in A Lady of Freedom is an intellectual who follows the values of the mind, the husband in this film is a materialist who represents the social values of the late 60s. Sun-Ah is reunited with the author of Blue Lips who had been attracted to her in their youth, and who is now the superior of her sister, Min-Ah. The two become lovers, and the memories of first love begin to outweigh Sun-Ah¡¯s pedantic married life. Although these memories never blossom into anything substantial, they are enough to lead Sun-Ah chopping off her hair with scissors taken from the strong grasp of her husband¡¯s hands, the film challenges the limits of melodrama. With allusions to cartoons, pop music, and bestselling novels of the time, this film presents itself as a cultural text of 60s popular culture. (Nam In-Young)
PROGRAM NOTE
A story about a middle-class, middle-aged woman who falls in love with the author of the bestselling novel, Blue Lips, this film, like the 50s melodrama, A Lady of Freedom, depicts a woman¡¯s mid-life crisis. Protagonist Sun-Ah shifts from being her husband¡¯s private property to an exploding bomb resisting his oppression. If the husband in A Lady of Freedom is an intellectual who follows the values of the mind, the husband in this film is a materialist who represents the social values of the late 60s. Sun-Ah is reunited with the author of Blue Lips who had been attracted to her in their youth, and who is now the superior of her sister, Min-Ah. The two become lovers, and the memories of first love begin to outweigh Sun-Ah¡¯s pedantic married life. Although these memories never blossom into anything substantial, they are enough to lead Sun-Ah chopping off her hair with scissors taken from the strong grasp of her husband¡¯s hands, the film challenges the limits of melodrama. With allusions to cartoons, pop music, and bestselling novels of the time, this film presents itself as a cultural text of 60s popular culture. (Nam In-Young)