| Index | 1 reviews in total |
9 out of 14 people found the following review useful:
Coming-of-age drama tiptoes on the edge of melodrama, 2 September 2001
![]()
Author:
toclement
Plum Blossom is primarily about two schoolmates, Se-in and Jay-ho, and
their
transformation to manhood from the naivete associated with the late teens.
Jay-ho is at first very shy about sex, but after his first very emotionally
draining experience, he comes to treat sex in a very physical and
emotionless manner. Se-in, on the other hand, falls in love with an older
woman and seems incapable of accepting the reality that there can be no
relationship between the two; his love for the woman pre-empts any deep
feelings from developing with any other girls his age.
Within this basic premise, the film follows the two young men from high
school to college, and it follows their exploits and heartbreaks along the
way. The movie manages to tell a pretty fascinating story about two very
realistic, albeit different, guys. As their friendship deepens, a very
tight, and genuinely touching bond develops between the two. Their
closeness is so believable that there are many moments you almost expect
them (or even root for them) to start making love to one another rather
than
the women they have such little emotional regard for. In fact, there is a
homo-erotic undercurrent running throughout the film, both in terms of the
relationship between the two males and in the way their bodies are
sensually
filmed. Se-in even at one point states to his friend that they are
essentially one person living in two separate bodies.
There is a point about 15 minutes before the end where I think the movie
would have been better off stopping. Instead it continues on to a more
dramatic climax, which I think took away a bit of the film's charm.
Nevertheless, Plum Blossom is an intriguing and different take on the
growing up theme and is well worth checking out.
| Plot synopsis | Ratings | External reviews |
| Main details | Your user reviews | Your vote history |