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Sopyonje

Original title: Seopyeonje
  • 1993
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
7.5/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
Sopyonje (1993)
DramaMusic

Despite its falling popularity, a father teaches his two children the Korean musical tradition of Pansori (one singer accompanied by one drummer).Despite its falling popularity, a father teaches his two children the Korean musical tradition of Pansori (one singer accompanied by one drummer).Despite its falling popularity, a father teaches his two children the Korean musical tradition of Pansori (one singer accompanied by one drummer).

  • Director
    • Im Kwon-taek
  • Writers
    • Chung-Joon Lee
    • Kim Myung-gon
  • Stars
    • Kim Myung-gon
    • Jung-hae Oh
    • Kim Kyu-chul
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.5/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Im Kwon-taek
    • Writers
      • Chung-Joon Lee
      • Kim Myung-gon
    • Stars
      • Kim Myung-gon
      • Jung-hae Oh
      • Kim Kyu-chul
    • 11User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 23 wins & 11 nominations total

    Photos23

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    Top cast7

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    Kim Myung-gon
    Kim Myung-gon
    • Youbong
    Jung-hae Oh
    • Songhwa
    Kim Kyu-chul
    • Dong-ho
    Sae-kil Shin
    Byeong-kyeong Ahn
    • Nak-san Geo-sa
    Yoo Hyeong-kwan
    • Korean traditional opera member
    Cho Jae-hyun
    Cho Jae-hyun
    • Dong-ho
    • (as Jo Jae-hyeon)
    • Director
      • Im Kwon-taek
    • Writers
      • Chung-Joon Lee
      • Kim Myung-gon
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews11

    7.51.2K
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    Featured reviews

    10ezechiel9

    A look at one aspect of the film

    Sopyonje deals with a a cultural music called Pansori. Until I saw this film I knew nothing about it, but now I appreciate its Beauty and History. If you are looking for a movie that talks greatly about Korean Culture, this is it.
    8strongmedicine51

    Unforgettable

    This is one of the best films about the Blues that I have ever seen. I defy you to find a member of the Hoary Tarnation of Blues, Delta, Mississippi, USA, that wouldn't spit, squint up at you and say, "Dang! That is the Blues!" Verdad! And while I'm exclaiming away, I swear to you that as I sat in our little local art house theater the audience just let the tears stream when they must with complete abandon. With no shame. Now there is some eastern magic.

    The film begins in an interesting way. The style is clearly modern and places the story distant from a medieval or fantasy era. The young actor's (Kyu-chul Kim) style however hearkens to the older traditions in Korean Theater. And soon his search fades into the story of his emotional roots. The film doesn't make an obvious judgment about the 'life' of these three people or their domination by their father-mentor. Yet the film challenges you to decide if his assumption to rule these growing children is culturally acceptable or extraordinary even in their world at large.

    There is a scene in a pension when the song master (Myung-gon Kim) becomes very drunk and garrulous. It is at once hilarious, tense and pathetic. Another, when the itinerants are walking with back packs in the middle of nowhere and begin a spontaneous dancing walk as they go along their way. These are glowing moments in cinema. The productions values are good and keep you placed always on the edge of the wild.

    And then the music! This is the blues. Truly, I can say no more.
    8IAdoreYou

    Sublime and Haunting!

    I got the chance to see Seopyeonje in a Korean class in school. Our Korean professor was a bit excited to let us watch this film. So we sat in the speech laboratory and devoted our attention to the projection screen at the front.

    I have to admit, after the first 30 minutes or so of watching this movie, I expected no more development in the plot, thinking that all the flatness of the story will endure until the end. I was bit by bit becoming impatient of watching it, annoyed by the (for me) dreary atmosphere of the 50s and rustic setting, not to mention the ear-splitting and irritating singing of the lead characters. I am also neither a fan of Asian flicks or Asian TV "novelas" and have no great tolerance of hearing characters speak languages alien to me, even if there were English subtitles flashing at the bottom of the screen. So I had to prolong my patience.

    But lucky to be seated on a chair in the front row, I had my attention not taken away from the movie which if otherwise I might have given up watching and fallen asleep because of drastic tedium. Then I began to realize, a movie like Seopyeonje is not one of the typical contemporary flicks, hyped and high-budgeted, only to deliver shallow entertainment to the audience. It then registered with me that I was becoming critical of the film too early. So I gave myself another chance and continued watching, this time with a different perspective. Thus my reflections go.

    Seopyeonje is not easy to watch without the watcher's religious attention. It is slow-paced and languorous at times, and I am convinced it is designed this way to convey exactly and completely its meaning. This meaning is the splendor of the arts, culture and tradition, inherent not only of Korea but of every nation. This movie would like us to appreciate and recognize the value of traditions and heritage slowly fading away while modernization advances and continues to overrun this world.

    The movie talks of pain, longing, passion and fortitude without much talking and melodrama. The actors' portrayals of their characters are unaffected and what are typical of real life. Their gestures, singing and expressions fit so perfectly that there needed to be not anything more to communicate what they needed to communicate. The singing is by far the key element of the film, being a musical and one centered on Pansori, a traditional Korean folk music. I confess I did not bear the tones and screams of the Pansori reciters at first but my perception gradually changed as the movie progressed.

    The culmination of Pansori art, as explained in the movie, is attained by overcoming grief and suffering. I can't help but be sympathetic about Songhwa (the female lead character) and her plight, but as she reached the peak of her art, my sympathy changed into admiration and the once annoying sound of Pansori transformed into a sublime and haunting melody to my ears.

    Seopyeonje is one of the finest cinema I have seen. It is characteristically sad and somber but all at once beautiful, emotional and moving. It certainly left an indelible mark in me. I recommend it to those who love art, culture and traditions and bored of mainstream Hollywood movies and to those who simply want to stray from convention.
    10NIXFLIX-DOT-COM

    Haunting and Beautiful

    One of the very best films to come out of South Korea. SOPYONJE tells the tale of pansori singers trying to survive in a world that no longer cares about them. The plight of the pansori singers is an allegory for traditional South Korea, a country being overrun by modernization and the Western world in the aftermath of World War II.

    The film's soundtrack alone is worth watching. I've never heard such haunting and beautiful singing in my life. Truly, a masterpiece that deserves to be remembered.

    10 out of 10

    (go to www.nixflix.com for a more detailed review of this film and reviews of other foreign movies)
    10happymin

    Maybe the best Korean movie ever made.

    I truly believe that this is the best film ever made in Korea until this date (1999). But it may be too difficult to grasp the film's true beauty for most Westerners who are foreign to Korean "chang" which is traditional Korean folk singing.

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    Music

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Connections
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    Details

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    • Release date
      • April 10, 1993 (South Korea)
    • Country of origin
      • South Korea
    • Language
      • Korean
    • Also known as
      • 西便制
    • Production company
      • Taehung Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $192
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 52m(112 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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