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Hill of Freedom(자유의 언덕)

✭ ✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Korea · 2014
1h 6m
Director Hong Sang-soo
Starring Ryō Kase, Moon So-ri, Seo Young-hwa, Kim Eui-sung
Genre Comedy, Drama

Kwon's old lover from Japan, Mori, has sent her a packet of letters. She accidentally drops the packet, making the letters fall out of order. To find out why Mori has come back to find her, Kwon must read all the undated letters and reconstruct the timeline.

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What are critics saying?

83

IndieWire by

Hong gives us a soulful, subtly acerbic, tongue-in-cheek critique of narrative coherence.

50

The Hollywood Reporter by Clarence Tsui

Clocking in at just over an hour, Hill of Freedom is Hong Sang-soo's shortest feature film to date. And it's his most lightweight, as well, with the Korean auteur merely reshuffling his tried-and-trusted play on non-linear structure, camera movements and characterizations without offering anything decidedly new

60

Screen Daily by Dan Fainaru

His fans will probably adore it, think it cute and original, the rest of the audience will sigh again in resignation and wonder whether this game of cinema riddles does have anything significant to say behind its smiling, insouciant wrapping.

90

The New York Times by Glenn Kenny

The ingenuity of the movie’s structure is stimulating and delightful, but there’s one aspect of “Hill” that some may find a trifle exasperating: Even more than any of the sad-sack men who populate the director’s other movies, Mori is kind of a stiff.

60

Variety by Guy Lodge

Hill of Freedom, its noble implications lending outward grandeur to a romantic triangle that reps a cream puff even by Hong’s trifling standards. Cream puffs have their merits, though — principally the aerated, uncomplicated sweetness that characterizes this barely feature-length distraction, the light emotional foibles and regrettably careless cinematic construction of which are of a piece with the helmer’s swiftly produced recent work.

67

The Playlist by Jessica Kiang

It may amount to less than a hill of beans, but Hill of Freedom is an amiable way to spend 66 minutes learning how even cultures that seem closely related to Western eyes, like those of Japan and Korea, can clash. And also how cultures like these, that seem so far from our own, can be trumped, by love, longing, friendship, sex and drunkenness, the same universal experiences we all share.

63

Slant Magazine by Kenji Fujishima

It isn’t without its pleasures and insights, but it’s ultimately little more than an excuse for Hong to try out a new stylistic color in his auteurist palette.

78

Austin Chronicle by Marc Savlov

Ultimately Hill of Freedom is surprisingly satisfying in its sheer — albeit abjectly disjointed – fish-out-of-water ordinariness.

100

The New Yorker by Richard Brody

Hong’s deft artistry is an attempt to get past the habits of issue-oriented, advocacy-besotted political cinema to work out just what a political cinema would be. And his answer is: first of all, it’s cinema. In this regard, he connects with Mankiewicz, Resnais, and other great filmmakers for whom politics is an important, interwoven part of life—and of art.

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