Meet, love, break up, and met again through 'work'! Seon Hwa and Do Yeong reunited in Busan as film location manager and director. The romance between the lovers who broke up and met through work is over, but it doesn't seem like it's over, another falling in love romance begins! (Source: HanCinema) Edit Translation
- English
- magyar / magyar nyelv
- עברית / עִבְרִית
- dansk
- Native Title: 영화의거리
- Also Known As: Street of Cinema , Director's Intention , Yeonghwauigeori , 영화의 거리
- Genres: Comedy, Romance, Drama, Melodrama
Cast & Credits
- Han Sun HwaSeon HwaMain Role
- Lee WanDo YoungMain Role
- Jung Haeng Shim[Grandmother]Support Role
- Kim Shin BiSoo HyunSupport Role
- Park Se KiHae SolSupport Role
- Kim Ri Hyun[Assistant director]Support Role
Reviews
Meeting and letting go.
Hwa-sun is a location manager based in Busan. Her ex boyfriend, Do-young, a former film student with aspirations to become a successful director left many years ago for Seoul, where the film industry is bigger. She didn't want to go and he didn't want to stay, and despite the love between them, their relationship came to an end.In present day, they are reunited through Do-young's new project. He's back in Busan for it and believes Hwa-sun is the right person to help him finds the locations he wants. It's obvious they have both kept themselves busy and achieving success in their respective fields. While Do-young choose the fast lane and became an up and coming director, Hwa-sun has slowly build a reputation and renown name among the industry insiders.
As they walk together the streets of this city that once saw their love bloom and wither, they find themselves revisiting their shared history, they also contemplate their choices and where they are at now. What happens when growing up means letting go? Would they have done any different? Can they find closure to this open wound?
Cinema Street it's a beautiful love letter to that one love that helped you grow as a person but also pushed you to want to become a better version of yourself. This rhythm of the script is contemplative but never boring. Han Sun-hwa and Lee Wan deliver good performances, nuance and mature, as two people finding themselves (perhaps for the last time) in front of the one that got away. The cinematography is what you would expect from an indie film set in Busan: beautiful to look at.
Overall, I really enjoyed this film and I hight recommend it to anyone.
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