Contrary to the scathing review which allocated only two stars, I found this film to be beautiful and fascinating. It was the kind of film with a happy ending of sorts, the young girl having (rightly) seen off her father and earlier her grandmother, both of whom had physically abused the girl for it seems like years.
Finally along comes the lesbian new chief of police who helps her escape from her awful predicament, albeit with possible sexual designs on the child of her own, although nothing sexual actually went on between them.
The movie was very clever in laying little traps for the viewer, making one wonder whether anything good would happen. It did! The girl did escape the violent clutches of her father when she turned the tables on him as he lay sleeping off a drunken stupor, an excellent touch.
Finally, we see the chief preparing herself for another relocation and saying goodbye to the girl. But when a fellow police officer, an underling, mentioned in passing that he thought the girl might be a bit of a monster, the chief realised they were made for each other, got him to stop the car, whereupon she ran back to the girl's house as the girl was possibly contemplating suicide on the waterfront.
The chief and the girl drove away in the pouring rain, both free for the time being from their separate demons. Well worth watching!
A Girl at My Door
2014 [KOREAN]
Action / Drama
small town post-traumatic stress disorder post traumatic stress disorder child abuse post-traumatic stress disorder (ptsd) violent father
Plot summary
Sent from Seoul to serve in a remote coastal village, a policewoman gets involved in the life of a mysterious teenage girl who is abused by both her father and her grandmother.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
March 31, 2023 at 12:34 PM
Director
Tech specs
720p.BLU 1080p.BLUMovie Reviews
This was a beautiful and fascinating movie
Who Helps The Helpless
This is a movie about a female police chief who comes across a young girl with an abusive home life. She does what she can to help this girl. For the most part, with the exception of a few dramatic scenes and situations, that is the movie.
The movie wasn't bad it was just really slow in my opinion. I would have liked the young girl's backstory to have had a bit more depth, a relationship could have been better understood but aside from that the story was ok. It was well acted and well shot.
It isn't a bad drama and I thought it ended well. Not a bad watch.
Another genre twister from Korea
I just caught this film at the Dublin Film Festival. I always make a point of seeing any Korean film coming up - I love the way Korean film makers simply defy any notion of genre, they seem to delight in twisting expectations.
This film didn't disappoint. At first, it follows the old plot line of a disgraced police officer, forced out to a dead end town to repair his (or in this case her) reputation. In this case, Young-Nam, a promising officer has been sent to an economically dying coastal town to keep her head down after an apparent scandal as she was outed as having a relationship with another woman. The film heads towards melodrama territory as she reluctantly starts to take care of an abused local girl, the daughter of a man seen by the other officers as too important to the town to take too hard a line with - they are content to hand out endless warnings without actually doing anything to stop him. Young-Nam is clearly unwilling to get too close to the girl, but finds it impossible not to offer her a safe refuge. From here, the film twists unexpectedly into some dark and weird territory as rather predictably, her good deed comes back to haunt her. The film does go into places where most films won't thread, in particular that difficult issue of the innocence or otherwise of abused children. But it is handled very sensitively, without shying away from hard questions.
The film is not perfect - the performances are a little uneven (it looks like many of the minor characters are played by amateurs). Doona Bae is of course the big name in the cast, and she is, as always, a charismatic and powerful presence. She is one of those rare actors who can hold the screen even when showing little outward emotion. In truth, although she is entirely central to the film, the character is not as fleshed out as much as I think she should be - more the scripts fault than the actors I think. She is clearly a deeply unhappy woman, but its not obvious why she rejects the possibility of a happier life with her former lover. There are also some issues with pacing of the film, it seems a little uncertain at times, perhaps not surprising as the director is a first timer (but I have to say, she shows great promise). The film rolls on to a surprisingly (for a Korean film) conventional ending, but there are enough twists and ambiguity to make it quite a satisfying finish.