Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

On the Occasion of Remembering the Turning Gate

2002 film by Hong Sang-soo From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

On the Occasion of Remembering the Turning Gate
Remove ads

On the Occasion of Remembering the Turning Gate, also referred to simply as Turning Gate, is the fourth film by South Korean director Hong Sang-soo.[citation needed]

Quick Facts Hangul, Hanja ...
Remove ads

Plot

Summarize
Perspective

In the dreary and rigid city of Seoul, Gyung-soo is an actor who's fairly well known on stage. He has trusted a director he knows well and acted in his movie, but it flops. He insists on receiving his actor's fee, but all he gets is a mere grand's worth. He also misses out on his chance to act in director's next movie. The future looks cloudy for him.

Gyung-soo goes down to Chuncheon to meet an old friend who's a writer, Seong-wu. They go out to the town and Gyung-soo's friend introduces him to a pretty dancer named Myung-sook. After having a drink with Gyung-soo and his friend, she suddenly hits on Gyung-soo and on the spur of the moment they hit it off and go to a motel. But Gyung-soo doesn't know that Seong-wu has long had feelings for Myung-soo, even though he has never revealed his true feelings for her. Gyung-soo's relationship with his friend turns sour as Myung-sook becomes obsessively infatuated with Gyung-soo.

Gyung-soo tries to put his bad memories of Chuncheon behind him and gets on a train headed for Gyeongju. Sitting next to him on the train is a woman named Sun-young who entices him after recognizing his face. After she gets off the train, he chases after Sun-young and stops her, but she gives him mixed signals. Gyung-soo follows Sun-young to her house and on the next day he works up enough courage to knock on her door. This time Gyung-soo falls in love.

Remove ads

Reception

Turning Gate has a 100% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[2]

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads