Your Company
 

Woman Is the Future of Man(여자는 남자의 미래다)

✭ ✭ ✭   Read critic reviews

Korea, France · 2004
1h 28m
Director Hong Sang-soo
Starring Yoo Ji-tae, Sung Hyun-ah, Kim Tae-woo, Oh Yoo-jin
Genre Drama, Romance

As the first snow falls in Seoul, two old friends reunite; one is a successful college professor, and the other, a struggling filmmaker recently returned from the United States. After their reminiscences, they finally decide to go in search of the young woman each had romanced years earlier.

We hate to say it, but we can't find anywhere to view this film.

What are people saying?

What are critics saying?

60

The New Yorker by Anthony Lane

Woman Is the Future of Man is doomed to infuriate, and its scrutiny of disconnected beings, filmed in long, hold-your-breath takes, might feel like old hat to anyone reared on Antonioni, yet Hong has a grace and stealth of his own, and his scenes tend to tilt in directions that few of us would dare to predict.

70

Variety by Derek Elley

Taken as a film about muddling along, "Woman" never bores the viewer with indecisive filmmaking. Basically, it's an elegant jeu, played and constructed with an almost Gallic lightness heightened by Jeong Yong-jin's bursts of music, all bouncy piano and pizzicato.

90

The New York Times by Manohla Dargis

Mr. Hong is not yet the equal of Mr. Antonioni, but it has become increasingly difficult to see intellectually stimulating, aesthetically bold films like this in American theaters.

60

Village Voice by Michael Atkinson

We're accustomed to an omniscient understanding of what movie characters, particularly in dramas about love and loss, are thinking, but Hong distributes information with a saline drip. Often, of course, his two lonely fools don't quite know what they're thinking, either--Woman can sometimes come off like an introverted "Carnal Knowledge" with two Jack Nicholsons.

50

The New Republic by Stanley Kauffmann

The danger in Hong's procedure is obvious. Dramatists learned long ago that it is risky to include a static character because he may so easily bore the audience.

75

New York Post by V.A. Musetto

Viewers not accustomed to Hong's style of leisurely paced filmmaking - long, static takes with lots of talking - might be tempted to leave early. If they stick around, however, they might find themselves becoming fans of the cerebral South Korean auteur.

Users who liked this film also liked