Come, Come, Come Upwards DVD Region All
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YesAsia Editorial Description
Sun Nyog is a generous, but rather innocent young woman, who receives constant chastisement from the Mother Superior for her apparent lack of discipline. After saving a drunken man from committing suicide, Sun Nyog is subsequently ejected from the temple and raped by the man. Over time she grows fond of her one-time attacker and falls in love with him. Jin Song, meanwhile, seeks the solitude of a barren cave for a long retreat, only to discover it is not uninhabited after all. A brutal old monk is also taking refuge within, and he turns on Jin Song and rapes her. When the two women finally return to the temple, their fates could not be more different.
Technical Information
| Product Title: | Come, Come, Come Upwards Come, Come, Come Upwards (韓國版) Come, Come, Come Upwards (韩国版) 波羅羯諦 ハラギャティ (韓国版) 아제 아제 바라아제 |
| Artist Name(s): | Kang Su Yeon | Im Kwon Taek 姜受延 | 林權澤 Kang Su Yeon | 林权泽 カン・スヨン | イム・グォンテク 강 수연 | 임권택 |
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| Release Date: | 2006-03-27 |
| Language: | Korean |
| Subtitles: | English |
| Country of Origin: | South Korea |
| Picture Format: | NTSC What is it? |
| Disc Format(s): | DVD |
| Region Code: | All Region What is it? |
| Rating: | III |
| Duration: | 134 (mins) |
| Publisher: | Spectrum DVD |
| Package Weight: | 170 (g) |
| Shipment Unit: | 1 What is it? |
| YesAsia Catalog No.: | 1004139948 |
Product Information
* Sound Mix : Dolby 2.0
* DVD Type : N/A
* Extras :
- 예고편
- 오리지널 포스터
- 스틸 사진 모음
* Director : 임권택
베트남전쟁의 상처로 승려가 되어 떠나버린 아버지와 육욕에서 헤어나지 못하는 고리대금업자 어머니, 자신을 겁탈한 어머니의 애인, 존경하던 선생에 대한 사랑의 상처 등의 업보를 안고 순녀는 입산하여 절에 머문다. 그러나 자살하려던 남자를 구출한 것이 계기가 되어 다시 파계하고 속세에 돌아오지만 그 남자는 죽고, 순녀는 또다시 방황을 계속한다. 그후 간호사 생활을 시작하나 거기에서도 몸바쳐 구하려던 남자가 죽자 자신의 업보의 끈질김을 깨닫고 다시 산사로 돌아온다.
보이지 않는 운명에 이끌려가는 인간의 불안과 그것으로부터 벗어나려는 자유에 대한 의지를 한국적인 영상기법으로 표현, 삶의 본질에 대한 깊은 성찰을 보인 작품이다.
1989년 제27회 대종상 최우수상을 수상했고, 강수연은 이 영화에서의 연기로 1990년 모스크바국제영화제에서 여우주연상을 수상했다.
고등학생 순녀는 부성의 아픔만 남기고 떠난 아버지 윤봉스님, 고리대금업을 하는 어머니 제주댁을 뒤로하고 덕암에 찾아와 은선스님을 모시고 비구니가 된다. 순녀는 박현우라는 사람을 구출한 일로 파계 아닌 파계를 하여 끝없는 시련을 맞는다. 남해안에서 구도의 길을 찾아 만행중인 진성을 만나 비금도 병원생활을 시작하나 다른 인간의 아픔을 체득하는 기간이 된다. 결국 순녀는 덕암사를 다시 찾아 진리,자유,구원 그 어떠한 지순지고의 가치도 사람이 아플 때 뿌리내리지 않고는 의미가 없다는 가르침을 스승인 은선으로부터 배운다
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Professional Review of "Come, Come, Come Upwards"
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Legendary director Im Kwon Taek tackles issues of faith and gender in Come, Come, Come Upwards, his 1989 religious-themed drama that took home Best Picture honors at the 27th Grand Bell Awards. This critically-acclaimed tale centers on the everyday experiences, personal hardships, and nagging philosophical questions faced separately by two very different Buddhist nuns, as they each try to discover and ultimately come to terms with their uncertain place in the universe. Through their various misadventures, the film alludes to the status of women in Korean culture at the time, and raises questions about the utility of Buddhism in modern society. Although the film achieves this feat through the utilization of dual protagonists, one of the women involved is clearly the lead. Early on, we are introduced to Lee Soon Nyeo (Kang Su Yeon) as she first approaches the nuns in a secluded Buddhist temple. As the film follows her concentrated efforts to earn acceptance into the convent, the narrative cuts intermittently to her earlier life and the experiences that may have motivated her to join the nunnery in the first place. In these flashbacks, we learn that, as a high school student, Soon Nyeo led an unhappy life, often clashing with her mother. As a result, a Buddhist monk enters their lives, and Soon Nyeo quickly guesses that he is indeed her missing, presumed dead father, who left their family years ago to join the priesthood to atone for his sins. Meanwhile, a handsome young teacher joins the faculty at Soon Nyeo's school, and she ends up pursuing the widowed educator on a cross-country trip that unfortunately ends in sadness and humiliation for both of them. Back in the present day, Soon Nyeo works diligently to earn the respect of her peers, but her all-too-self-assured interpretations of Buddhist scripture earn her reprimands from the abbey's Mother Superior. Eventually, however, the old nun sees definite potential in Soon Nyeo, agreeing to not only confirm her status as a nun, but install her as a personal assistant of sorts. This turn of events happens in tandem with the demotion of Jin Sung (Jin Yong Ming), a naïve, by-the-book nun who has long enjoyed her position as the Mother Superior's second banana, but knows little more than how to follow orders and memorize Buddhist texts. Not long after a philosophical interchange between Jin Sung and Soon Nyeo that is witnessed by several other nuns, the Mother Superior decides Jin Sung needs more experience and sends her away to learn more about the outside world. There, she confronts perspectives she had never considered, learning that her rote imitation of Buddhist scripture fails to live up to the expectations of the real world. Early on, an eager young novelist approaches her to debate the merits of seclusion, the ultimate goals of Buddhism, and the religion's decrease in popularity among Koreans in the face of Christianity. Later, after being given a riddle to solve by the Mother Superior, Jin Sung secludes herself in the mountains, choosing to meditate alone in a cave. However, she soon discovers that she has company in the form of a wily old monk who will test her faith in ways she never imagined. At the monastery, Soon Nyeo plays the Good Samaritan when she saves the life of a drunken criminal who attempts to commit suicide in the ruins of an old temple. Unfortunately, no good deed goes unpunished, as the man becomes fixated on Soon Nyeo, seeing her as his savior, guide, and potential wife. His increasingly obsessive behavior ends up disrupting the day-to-day activities of the convent, which forces the powers that be to expel her. Without any means of support, she accompanies the man, only to find herself being raped by him. Instead of dividing them, however, it brings them closer together, as they live as man and wife and begin to turn both their lives around. All seems well until tragedy strikes, which leaves Soon Nyeo alone once more, bouncing from man to man, adventure to adventure, until her long and winding path finally leads her back to the nunnery, as it does Jin Sung, to take care of the dying abbess. Ill beyond belief, the Mother Superior hangs on just long enough to find out, what, if anything, her two star pupils have learned during their separate journeys. When Soon Nyeo and Jin Sung finally reunite at story's end, the audience finds that while they may be standing in close proximity in a purely physical sense, they are miles apart philosophically. Although a greater knowledge of Korean culture and language, as well as more specific schooling in Buddhism, would have enriched the experience of Come, Come, Come Upwards considerably, it is by no means a necessity in understanding and appreciating the quality of the film itself. Neither flashy nor commercial in intent or design, Im Kwon Taek's deeply involving tale, like the Zen koans rattled off in the film, resists giving audiences any final, definitive answers. Essentially, Come, Come, Come Upwards asks viewers to think about how Buddhism (and religion in general) can be useful in the modern age, as it explores the tension between living a devoted life of seclusion or actually venturing out into the real world and applying the tenets of Buddhism to the masses. But even as it achieves this aim, Come, Come, Come Upwards is not simply a movie about ideas, but one about real characters as viewers are likely to find themselves absorbed into the sad, oddly uplifting life of the film's playful, yet altogether resilient main character, Lee Soon Nyeo. By Calvin McMillin |












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