My Love, Don't Cross That River

My Love, Don't Cross That River

2014 ""
My Love, Don't Cross That River
My Love, Don't Cross That River

My Love, Don't Cross That River

7.9 | 1h26m | en | Drama

There live a couple known as "100-year-old lovebirds." As fairy tale's characters, the husband is strong like a woodman, and the wife is full of charms like a princess. They dearly love each other wearing Korean traditional clothes all the time, and still fall asleep hand in hand. However, the death, quietly and like a thief, sit between them. This film starts from this moment, and follows the last moments of 76 years of their marriage.

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7.9 | 1h26m | en | Drama , Documentary , Romance | More Info
Released: November. 27,2014 | Released Producted By: CGV Arthouse , Argus Film Country: South Korea Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

There live a couple known as "100-year-old lovebirds." As fairy tale's characters, the husband is strong like a woodman, and the wife is full of charms like a princess. They dearly love each other wearing Korean traditional clothes all the time, and still fall asleep hand in hand. However, the death, quietly and like a thief, sit between them. This film starts from this moment, and follows the last moments of 76 years of their marriage.

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Cast

Director

Park Hyuck-jee

Producted By

CGV Arthouse , Argus Film

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Reviews

Jakester This film is without question the finest documentary I've ever had the honor of watching. It's an astonishingly beautiful and moving examination of love, life, aging, family, work, the seasons, and Korea. As someone studying documentary filmmaking, I can only say, I hope and pray to have an opportunity to do something half as good - if I do, I'll feel my life has been well spent.
Dennis Matthies (DennisMatthies) A film for us from South Korea, nominated for a Palm d'Or at Cannes: My Love, Don't Cross That River. It's as if the camera lives next door to a couple that is very elderly and stops by to check on them from time to time, just to see how they are doing. At first they are both doing well. They play with each other like a pair of puppies. Gradually an illness takes hold of the man, and on each visit of the camera we see some loss. At the end, we sit a respectful distance from his wife, as she grieves her husband's death. This is in the style of "slow film," which means things happen at the speed of life, and all the "drama" is at the level of small everyday events which, in their slowness, unfold in a glorious way. A look. A touch. A cough. It's all the "drama" that the heart can bear. This film also has a unique position in the emerging style that blurs fiction and documentary.
mimss-185-392353 I watched "My love don't cross that river" on Sofia film fest 2016 in documentary program. I laughed and cried. Beautiful story full with hope. Hope that love actually exist. I cried because maybe i will never felt that kind of love. I'm very thankful that i watched it. When the man singing a song to his wife and they dance together. The way that he touching her face. The most sad scene when they bought clothes for their dead children. Everything was just perfect. And the fact that this is real story with real people is the most exciting thing. Great movie. Great story. I want to watch that movie again and again. I recommend it. My love don't cross that river you must watch that movie!
politic1983 'My Love, Don't Cross that River' is a film of two halves. We start at the film's inevitable conclusion, but are quickly moved into the story of life-ling married couple, Jo Byeong-man and Kang Kye-yeol. Married for seventy-six years, the pair now spend their days in and around their home, playing with their dogs and frolicking like little children in love. This documentary, without narration, watches them together as they go about their daily business, shopping, performing chores and having their many children and grandchildren visit. Director Jin Mo- young sets out to paint a picture of a couple very much in love, still after a whole lifetime together. However, with Byeong-man now approaching one-hundred years-old it is clear that their seventy-six years of married life are drawing to a close. The documentary soon switches from a joyful tale of love to a distressing piece on mortality and how all good things must come to an end. With his health deteriorating, Byeong-man can no longer perform his role as the man, confined to lying, coughing a spluttering, sharing final moments with his six surviving children. Kye-yeol, however, can only sit and watch, preparing herself for the inevitable, performing his last rites. We start off in bright and joyful mode, with an easy to watch story about an ageing couple. By the end, we are left with everyone in tears, with the final forty minutes a struggle to sit through as we watch a dying man in his last moments, while his wife and family come to terms with it, as all good things must come to an end. Without yang, there is no yin, without death, there is no life, without Byeong-man, there is no Kye-yeol. Jin's documentary has gone on to become the highest grossing independent film or documentary in Korean history, and it's not hard to see why. He lets the camera roll and the narrative come out naturally, in what could have easily become forced and lacking respect. 'My Love, Don't Cross that River' is, at times, uncomfortable viewing, but so is life, reminding us that with every up there must be a down.politic1983.blogspot.com