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Ardor
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Country
: |
South
Korea |
| Year: |
2002
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| Genre: |
Drama |
| Format: |
DVD |
| Running
Time: |
1H52 |
| Distributor: |
Bitwin |
| Date
reviewed: |
09/23/05 |
| |
|
| Producer: |
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| Director: |
Young-joo
Byun |
Cast: Yoon-jim Kim, Jong-won
Lee, Seung-Ri Ha, Min-kyeong Kim, Seong-Yong Kye,, Byung-ho
Son |
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Story:
After Mi-heum discovers her husband’s infidelity,
she begins one of her own.
Review: ARDOR opens up with Yoon-jin Kim
swimming deep underwater as the opening title comes
up. Shades of blue bounce off the surrounding light
and she stares into the camera with an almost calm
look. This simple and serene shot sets up the mood
for the rest of the film as director Young-joo Byun
takes us on a melancholy journey of lost love and
love found.
A quick montage recaps her life as a normal, happy
housewife and mother until the inciting incident is
revealed. It is in these moments after the introduction
that we discover her husband’s infidelity and
the attack from his lover upon Yoon-jim Kim’s
character, Mi-heun, which physically and emotionally
changes her life forever. ARDOR finally begins six
months later when Mi-heum and her family move to the
countryside to escape and recover from the harsh event.
Young-joo Byun’s storytelling is definitely
pretty, but the trouble in his cinematic paradise
is the pacing. While every shot of Mi-heum sitting,
standing, or staring in retrospect is painted gorgeously
by its surroundings, it does little to push the story
along gracefully and often comes off as emotionally
redundant. Though, ARDOR slightly picks up once she
begins having an affair of her own with a young doctor
by the name of In-gyu.
Mi-heum’s affair is explored captivatingly by
how her character develops and revealed through their
love making sessions and how she deals with her family
during this time. It is easy to go back and forth
in deciphering her intentions. Is it true love that
she is rediscovering? Or is it a subconscious revenge
on her husband’s unfaithfulness? One never truly
knows and the ambiguity of her motivations is what
makes ARDOR stand out from the usual “unfaithful”
oriented pictures.
When the film ended, it brought me back to the opening
shot with Mi-heum underwater, giving me a sense of
clarity about the picture. They say that when a person
drowns after the first gulp of water into their lungs,
tranquility sets in. Is life so beautiful and difficult
to live that it can be overwhelming sometimes? Because
happiness is fleeting, do we all live in a drowned
state? Of all the themes Young-Joo Byun takes us through,
this one shines the brightest.
In the end, ARDOR is a beautiful picture that, while
psychologically thought provoking, is very numbing
in its romance. Yoon-jim Kim does an extraordinary
job taking her character through her arc and director
Young-joo Byun surprising us every step of Mi-heum’s
way. But it is the slowness and cinematically calm
that can be a curse to some. Either way, ARDOR is
a unique film that reinvents the infidelity drama.
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DVD
[ NTSC,
Region 2 ] :
ARDOR comes packaged in a regular DVD case with an outer
casing as with most Korean releases. Usual special features
include a featurette, music video, deleted scenes, photo
gallery, and cast and crew info. The second disc of
this special edition contains the soundtrack of the
film. The subtitles are very good in size and quality,
though awkward grammar appears every once in a while.
ARDOR can be displayed in anamorphic widescreen and
contains Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround.
Reviewed
by J. D. Nguyen
You
can buy this movie on DVD at:
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| Story |
Cast |
Entertainment |
Subtitles |
Overall |
| 3 |
4 |
3 |
3.5 |
3 |

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| © 1999-2005 by KFC
Cinema. All rights reserved. |
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