Last Present | |
---|---|
Hangul | |
Hanja | |
Revised Romanization | Seonmul |
McCune–Reischauer | Sŏnmul |
Directed by | Oh Ki-hwan |
Produced by | Kim Mi-hee Kim Sang-jin Kang Woo-suk |
Written by | Park Jung-woo |
Starring |
Lee Young-ae Lee Jung-jae |
Music by | Jo Seong-woo |
Cinematography | Lee Suck-hyun |
Edited by | Lee Hyun-mee |
Distributed by | Cinema Service |
Release date
|
|
Running time
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113 minutes |
Country | South Korea |
Language | Korean |
Last Present (Hangul: 선물; RR: Seonmul; lit. "Present" or "Gift") is a 2001 South Korean film. Directed by Oh Ki-hwan, it tells the tale of Yong-ki (Lee Jung-jae), a struggling comedian who continues to see parallels between his disintegrating relationship with his wife, Jung-yeon (Lee Young-ae), and the characters he's playing on the stage.
The film traces the romance, marriage and estrangement of a down-and-out comedian, Yong-ki (Lee Jung-jae) and his long-suffering wife, Jung-yeon (Lee Young-ae). Both of them defied his parents to get married but it seems his parent's fears that things will never work out are coming true. Yong-ki hides behind a facade of optimism even as he turns down boring job offers in the hopes that his comedic talent will be noticed on a famous talent show he's auditioning for. Meanwhile, Jung-yeon has to support them both as well as bear the pain of a miscarriage that Yong-ki is trying his best to forget. To make matters worse, Jung-yeon discovers that she's dying from a terminal disease and though Yong-ki suspects that something is wrong, she never tells him about her illness. Through the silent suffering and the estrangement, both husband and wife believe their marriage is over. But what they fail to notice until it is too late is that they still love each other deeply but both have been overcome by the trials life has thrown at them.