TONE FINE SPRING DAY
(Bomnaleun ganda)
Directed by Hur Jin-ho
(2001), 115 minutes
“Your eyes kissed mine.
I saw the love in them shine” – Plaisir D’amour
Although Alfred Lord Tennyson
said, “Tis better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all”,
anyone who has endured the breakup of an intense relationship would not
necessarily agree. Certainly not Lee Sang-woo (Yu Ji-tae), the young sound
engineer from Seoul, Korea in Hur Jin-ho’s exquisite second feature One
Fine Spring Day (literally Spring day goes). In the film of quiet power,
two young people meet, fall in love, then gradually pull back and withdraw,
but the film is not about their circumstances, but about the impermanence
of life and how we must learn to ride the roller coaster. Like Hur’s 1998
film Christmas in August, it is a realistic and intimate work, filled with
a touching lyricism that never succumbs to manipulative devices.
Working to record sounds
of nature for a radio station, Sang-woo and radio disc jockey Han Eun-su
(Lee Yeong-ae) meet at a bus station in a most unusual way. Unable to wake
her from a bench in the waiting room, he calls her on his cell phone even
though she is sitting right next to him. As they work together, their relationship
develops slowly. She has recently been divorced and he lives at home with
his father, aunt, and grandmother. The joy of discovering a new relationship
is conveyed against a background of nature – its mountains, forests, and
streams and, as we listen to the two recording the sound of the wind against
the bamboo and the wheat fields, we are struck by the mood of serenity
created by the cinematography of Kim Hyeong-gyu and the original music
of Jo Sung-woo, based on the French ballad, “Plaisir D’amour”.
Impermanence is a constant
theme in the film and the seasons represent various stages in the character’s
relationship. To underscore the fleeting nature of love, Sang-woo’s grandmother
denies that her deceased husband was ever unfaithful to her and, barely
in touch with reality, goes to the train station everyday to wait for him.
Though Eun-su lives in the provinces, she and Sang-woo begin to meet each
other after work and spend some nights together. On the surface, they are
an attractive couple - warm, sensitive, and very cute together. But Hur
drops hints that each, in their own way is eager to pull away from what
looks like it might become a lasting relationship. Though the reason for
their growing coolness toward each other is not specifically defined, she
may be reacting to the fallout from her last marriage or may be put off
by his tendency to cling. In his first real relationship, he may be having
thoughts that it is too soon to close off other possibilities in life.
Neither, however, communicates
their fears and, like a flower that is not being nurtured, their relationship
is allowed to wither. As she withdraws, he pursues her even more, giving
her the upper hand and placing her in a controlling position and Sang-woo
is run by his expectations and disappointment, drinking and hiding out
when things start to turn sour. In One Fine Spring Day, we learn that,
as in the Buddhist tradition, life has the characteristics of instantaneity,
impermanence, and decay and that the three realms are deceptive and illusory
in nature. We share Sang-woo’s discovery of the joy of love and also its
confusion and pain. Literally, not too much happens in the film, and, on
paper it sounds ordinary, but, like the poetry of Walt Whitman, if we look
beneath the surface we can easily see the divine in the commonplace.
GRADE: A-
Howard
Schumann