The director is Kim Ki-duk. I like his style, a quiet but meaningful movie.
There is almost no dialogue between the hero and heroine, only the thought of "I love you" that I
don't know when to accept. I feel that the real movie does not need language, and the movie is to use the lens and atmosphere to render all the mood that cannot be expressed in words.
Also like literature, if the dialogue of characters is always recorded, it is the exhaustion of language.
"Ayeshteni" by Natacha Atlas seems to be an Egyptian-flavored melody that runs through the entire movie. It is a highlight of the movie in my opinion. I like this mysterious feeling and I like this song very much.
The acting skills of the actors are also impeccable, I didn't expect that Jae Hee, who plays soap operas, can also perform art.
Marriage, love, domestic violence, social realities, lifestyles and attitudes, or hallucinations. . . . There is finally a touch of warmth at the back of the film, and the subtitle at the end:
"It's hard to tell that the world we live in is either a reality or a dream" In this world, it is sometimes difficult to tell whether life is real or an illusion. . . . . .
"Empty Room" leaves us with infinite reverie, and this line of words makes realistic people think more realistic, and romantic people have more fantasy space.
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