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Lies

Original title: Gojitmal
  • 1999
  • 1h 52m
IMDb RATING
5.5/10
1.7K
YOUR RATING
Lies (1999)
AdultKoreanComing-of-AgeDramaRomance

A sadomasochistic sexual relationship between a 38-year-old sculptor and an 18-year-old highschool student.A sadomasochistic sexual relationship between a 38-year-old sculptor and an 18-year-old highschool student.A sadomasochistic sexual relationship between a 38-year-old sculptor and an 18-year-old highschool student.

  • Director
    • Jang Sun-woo
  • Writers
    • Jung-Il Chang
    • Jang Sun-woo
  • Stars
    • Lee Sang-hyun
    • Kim Tae-yeon
    • Jeon Hye-jin
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.5/10
    1.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jang Sun-woo
    • Writers
      • Jung-Il Chang
      • Jang Sun-woo
    • Stars
      • Lee Sang-hyun
      • Kim Tae-yeon
      • Jeon Hye-jin
    • 17User reviews
    • 23Critic reviews
    • 47Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 2 nominations total

    Photos2

    View Poster
    View Poster

    Top Cast16

    Edit
    Lee Sang-hyun
    • J
    Kim Tae-yeon
    • Y
    • (as Tae Yeon Kim)
    Jeon Hye-jin
    Jeon Hye-jin
    • Woori
    • (as Jun Hye-jin)
    Hyun Joo Choi
    • G
    Kwon Taek Han
    • Y's Brother
    Hyeok-poong Kwon
    • J's Senior
    • (as Hyuk Poong Kwon)
    Myung Keum Jung
    • Senior's Wife
    Young Sun Cho
    • J's Father
    Mi Kyung Ahn
    • Noodle Shop Owner
    Kum Ja Yeom
    • Short Rib Shop Owner
    Boo Ho Choi
    • Motel Owner
    Hye Won Goh
    • Motel Owner's Wife
    Chui Jin Kwak
    • Taxi Driver
    Jin-ho Lee
    • Taxi Driver
    Jae Sup Jun
    • Noodle Shop Customer
    Mi Ran Yim
    • Noodle Shop Customer
    • Director
      • Jang Sun-woo
    • Writers
      • Jung-Il Chang
      • Jang Sun-woo
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    5.51.7K
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    Featured reviews

    verdie

    Realistic BDSM relationship

    I just got back from seeing the new Korean film "Lies," a portrayal of a consensual BDSM relationship between an 18-year-old student and a 38-year-old sculptor.

    First, the bad stuff: it's not a very good movie. Amateurishly filmed, with shaky camera work and some of the weirdest directorial decisions I've ever seen. This is not "Last Tango In Paris" or anything like it.

    But if you can get past that, what's left at the core is one of the most sympathetic, honest and realistic portrayals I've ever seen of BDSM as it's actually played. The two types of players -- the sculptor is a primary sadomasochist, whose needs for BDSM play are strong, innate and non-situation-dependent; the student is a secondary sadomasochist, who derives her enjoyment of BDSM from her partner's reaction -- are accurately and sympathetically portrayed. Consent is scrupulously observed, with plenty of check-ins and other good communciation. The emotional reactions to play are dead-on. The bad things that happen in the movie take place because of outside intervention by the vanilla world, not because there's anything wrong or sick about the couple themselves.

    As far as I could tell, most of the scenes of BDSM play were real, not staged or faked -- and they're intense. Switchings, canings, paddlings -- with lingering camera shots afterwards of welts and bruises. (One scat play scene was apparently faked, which was OK by me - shudder.) Some of the play was not up to community standards of safe technique; a shot of a garden hose thudding down right across the woman's kidneys had me cringing. But it also seemed true to what might happen in a culture which provides no information or support for its kinkyfolk.

    Well worth seeing in a theater if you live in an urban center where it's showing, or adding to your video collection later on if you can find it.
    7rlcsljo

    A classic comedy about sex addiction.

    As I recall, in G. Lucas' film "THX-1138" there was a television channel that featured nothing but a robot beating a naked person with his billy club. When I first saw this, I laughed out loud at the obvious satire of our society's need for sex and violence in our entertainment. I had much the same feeling after seeing this film.

    At first the film seemed like a competent look at how two people in love want to explore every aspect of each other's bodies. The initial mild S&M just seemed like a logical extension of that exploration. But when the beatings bordered on mutual self destruction, I immediately saw this as lampooning our society's need for ever increasing "kicks" to satisfy our insatiable lust for ever increasing degradation of the human body.

    The director suckered us in and punched us right in the gut! Bravo!.
    7Maya7715

    Harsh, provocative, unique

    When I first popped this DVD in, I had no idea what I was in store for. Sure, I read the description on the back and the reviewers quotes and I knew it was unrated, but I had no idea... Lies is a bold film. Whether you despise the places it dares to go or admire it for going there, you cannot argue the fact that it goes to the outer most limit. At times I found myself queasy, sometimes out of how graphic the sex was and other times out of a feeling that I was uncomfortable for the actors for being that naked -- i'm not talking about just their skin -- i mean their vulnerability being in those scenes to begin with. Although I would usually ask what the point of a movie this raw is, in this case I have to say that I'm really glad that I saw it. I don't know what you walk away with from it, but I do know that I'm always psyched to see something different cinematically than what I already know and surprisingly satisfied to discover a film that I didn't know existed. Lies delivered both. I can't really put my finger on what it is about the film and it's not my type (AT ALL) but it's worth it. For some intangible reason, it is worth it and has much merit.

    If you're not uptight and can deal with watching thing that you would probably not venture nor wish to do and want to see a filmmaker totally unashamed and unfazed at exploring a genre, then this is a movie that is definitely worth seeing. 7/10.
    wazsie

    Profound, intriguing, or just a comic pornographer with a rabble of prostitutes?

    I was unfortunate enough to catch the last 15-20 minutes of this movie one late night. I was horrified. How it could be played on cable TV without some kind of warning in the title, i don't know.

    It was on again last night. I dared not turn the channel.

    It scares me that this movie was allowed to come into Australia. I mean, yeah its art blah blah, but how did it get thru those Christian groups who lobbied against eyes wide shut and that french film that had real sex. Cos this is not faked lovie dovie sex. Its awful, and it turned me off having sex if it looked like that! i mean, ew! wrongness!

    So: If you're into the whole S&M beating the ass with stuff, well go ahead, watch it. But if you have a weak stomach, or cant handle graphic sex scenes, don't watch it.
    3film-critic

    *Whip/Crack* went this frumpy tale...

    I was at first disgusted with director Sun-Woo Jang because I had felt that he cheated me. Jang had the potential to create a strong, deeply emotional film about sex and its effects on people, but instead chose to focus his strength on the pornography element more than the actual human element. I couldn't see the characters at first and his sloppy introduction which blended both realism and cinema together was amateurish at best … yet this film remained in my mind for days after I viewed it. What stayed with me wasn't the story, it wasn't the characters, nor was it the apparent pornographic nature of the film, but the transition that Jang demonstrated between Y and J. If you watch this film carefully, you will see that both begin in an exploration phase of their relationship, eager to jump into the unknown, but not quite certain the next step. As they continue to meet, exploring new avenues of pleasure, they continually jump between the aggressor and the aggressed. Jang initially explores the idea that J is the one that in control of the situation, then hauntingly, the reversal happens when J becomes obsessed with Y. It is a very small change, and due to the graphic content of this film, it can easily be missed, but it is there. It becomes apparently clear near the end when J cannot live with Y, as their meetings become less frequent, and J attempts to become a part of normal society. This was a huge and very exciting element to this film to see right before your eyes, but alas, it was the only element of this film worth viewing.

    I will ignore those that speak of this film as nothing more than pornographic, because there are human elements at the core of this film, as underdeveloped as they are, they are there. It is a film about a facet of our lives that is very rarely explored in cinema or talked about in the papers. What happens behind closed doors is never known … or so we should believe. While the act itself does becomes repetitive after a bit, director Jang tries to change it up a bit with some constantly changing scenery. Our characters are continually moving from hotel room to hotel room to best quench their thirst for each other's flesh. This is fun at first, but again, Jang's repetitive streak seems to make it feel boring than exciting. This leads me to the biggest issue that I had with this film. Jang had a great story with Gojitmal, but where he failed (outside of the obvious choice to focus directly on the pornographic side) was that he took scenes, repeated them time and again, without changing in front of us to allow us to get to know the characters. Where was Jang going with this movie? Did he want the sex to tell the stories, or did he believe the characters would? He failed in this sense because by the end of the film we know so little about Y and J that we could care less how they resolve themselves. The ending seems almost random at best as Jang attempts to create a final resolution for our two, absolute unknowns, of this film. I have to give Jang some credit for trying, but not much. He attempted to create some sub-stories that would create the personal element that we were lacking, but they just couldn't congeal well together. Y's brother and J's wife were those plot points, but again, due to him focusing so strongly on the sexual element, these stronger sub-stories became un-rememberable and down-right dull. Maybe it was just how I viewed this film, but outside of the sexual scenes, nothing else worked together. We knew nothing about J and Y and that is why Gojitmal failed.

    Finally, I would like to say that this film could have benefited from having a strong score or a daftly remote music genre element to it to bring us, the viewers, closer to the emotions being felt by J and Y. From what I can remember, and I am trying to push this film far from my mind, I don't remember any musical undertones. Gojitmal may have been a stronger film if Jang either stylized it with music or done something to allude towards our character's beings. While I understand that he wanted the sex to speak for itself, there was just a technical element missing from this film that may have quenched a stronger desire for more. Technically, this was a poor film. Obviously an independent film in nature, it felt more like director Jang was trying to make symbolic references out of nothing instead of your typical independent of this nature. I didn't see as much of a social message or human element like mentioned above, I just felt like he threw this film together over the course of two weeks and understood that the sex would sell it enough. This was no Larry Clark production; this was sub-par and definitely needed some further technical clicks to develop it stronger than the final release!

    Overall, I think I could have liked this film and there were smaller elements that I did enjoy, but I felt this film was rushed, repetitive, and played too much towards the taboos instead of breaking them. The obvious pitfalls of this film can be seen by the last scene of this film when we are privy to how the title of this film was conceived. Our characters were uneventful, our story was underdeveloped, and we could have used something memorable to make what was happening between Y and J into something more symbolic than sex. To me, Jang was trying too much to capture art house meets pornographic … and it failed miserably. This was not a film worth the time and effort that it took to make.

    Grade: ** out of *****

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Though the onscreen sex stops just this side of hard-core, it's fairly evident that intercourse is actually taking place in some scenes. Production notes assert that Lee Sang-hyun fell in love with his co-star Kim Tae-yeon during filming but that this was not reciprocated.
    • Connections
      Featured in Jang Seonu byeonjugok (2001)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 8, 2000 (South Korea)
    • Country of origin
      • South Korea
    • Language
      • Korean
    • Also known as
      • Yalanlar
    • Filming locations
      • South Korea
    • Production companies
      • Korea Films
      • Shin Cine Communications
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $61,900
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $8,232
      • Nov 19, 2000
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 52m(112 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby SR

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