Like nature itself, both elementally simple and complexly beautiful.
Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter... And Spring (2004)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:91
Fresh:86
Rotten:5
Average Rating:8/10
Consensus: A visually stunning and contemplative piece of work.
Theatrical Release:Apr 2, 2004 Limited
Box Office: $2,105,230
Synopsis: The exquisitely beautiful and very human drama SPRING, SUMMER, FALL, WINTER… AND SPRING, starring director KIM Ki-duk, is entirely set on and around a tree-lined lake where a tiny Buddhist... The exquisitely beautiful and very human drama SPRING, SUMMER, FALL, WINTER… AND SPRING, starring director KIM Ki-duk, is entirely set on and around a tree-lined lake where a tiny Buddhist monastery floats on a raft amidst a breath-taking landscape. The film is divided into five segments with each season representing a stage in a man's life. Under the vigilant eyes of Old Monk (wonderful veteran theatre actor OH Young-soo), Child Monk learns a hard lesson about the nature of sorrow when some of his childish games turn cruel. In the intensity and lushness of summer, the monk, now a young man, experiences the power of lust, a desire that will ultimately lead him, as an adult, to dark deeds. With winter, strikingly set on the ice and snow-covered lake, the man atones for his past actions, and spring starts the cycle anew… With an extraordinary attention to visual details, such as using a different animal (dog, rooster, cat, snake) as a motif for each section, writer/director/editor KIM Ki-duk has crafted a totally original yet universal story about the human spirit, moving from Innocence, through Love and Evil, to Enlightenment and finally Rebirth. SPRING The wooden doors of a gated threshold open on a small monastery raft that floats upon the tranquil surface of a mountain pond. The hermitage's sole occupants are an Old Monk (OH Young-soo) and his boy protégé Child Monk (KIM Jong-ho). While exploring the world in and around their secluded idyll, Child Monk indulges in the capricious cruelties of boyhood. After tying stones to a fish, a frog, and a snake, Child Monk awakens to find himself fettered by a large stone Old Monk has bound to him. The old man calmly instructs the boy to release the animals, promising him that if any of the creatures die "you'll carry the stone in your heart for the rest of your life.” SUMMER The doors open again on Boy Monk now aged 17 (SEO Jae-kyung) who meets a woman (KIM Jung-young) making a pilgrimage with her spiritually ill daughter (HAYeo-jin). "When she finds peace in her soul," Old Monk reassures the mother, "her body will return to health." The girl awakens desire in Boy Monk and the sensual flirtation between the two of them culminates in passionate lovemaking on pond-side rocks. After a furtive but tender tryst in the abbey's rowboat, the lovers are discovered by Old Monk. The girl, now healed, is sent back to her mother. Forsaking his monastery home, the infatuated Boy Monk follows her. FALL Long absent from the monastery, Young Adult Monk (KIM Young-Min), now a thirty year old fugitive, returns to the abbey raft still consumed by a jealous rage that has compelled him to commit a violent crime. When Young Adult Monk attempts penitence as cruel as his misdeed, Old Monk punishes him. The Old Monk instructs Young Adult Monk to carve Pranjaparpamita (Buddhist) sutras into the hermitage's deck in order to find peace in his heart. Two policemen arrive at the abbey to arrest Young Adult Monk but thanks to Old Monk, they let Young Adult Monk continue carving the sutras. Young Adult Monk collapses from exhaustion and the two policemen finish decorating the sutras before taking Young Adult Monk into custody. Alone again, Old Monk prepares a ritual funereal pyre for himself. WINTER The doors open on the now frozen pond and abandoned monastery. The now mature Adult Monk (played by director KIM Ki-duk) returns to train himself for the penultimate season in his spiritual journey-cycle. A veiled woman arrives bearing an infant that she leaves in Adult Monk's care. In a pilgrimage of contrition, Adult Monk drags a millstone to the summit of a mountain overlooking the pond. As he gazes down on the pond that buoys the monastery and the mountainsides that gently hold the pond like cupped hands, Adult Monk acknowledges the unending cycle of seasons and the accompanying ebb and flow of life's joys and sorrows. ... AND SPRING The doors open once again on a beautiful spring day. Grown from a child to a man and from a novice to a master, Adult Monk has been reborn as teacher for his new protégé. Together, Adult Monk and his young pupil are to start the cycle anew…. DIRECTOR'S STATEMENT "I intended to portray the joy, anger, sorrow and pleasure of our lives through four seasons and through the life of a monk who lives in a temple on Jusan Pond surrounded only by nature." -- KIM Ki-duk [More]
Starring: Kim Ki-Duk, Oh Young-soo, Kim Jong-ho, Seo Jae-kyung
Starring: Kim Ki-Duk, Oh Young-soo, Kim Jong-ho, Seo Jae-kyung, Kim Jung-young, Hayeo-Jin, Kim Young-min
Director: Kim Ki-Duk
Director: Kim Ki-Duk
Screenwriter: Kim Ki-Duk
Producer: Kim Ki-Duk
Studio: Sony Pictures Classics
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Reviews for Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter... And Spring
The impression this movie leaves is profound: Here is an artist who sees things whole.
Although not as gut-wrenching or politically pugnacious as some of his previous work, Kim's film allows a sense of moral renewal unclouded by sentimentality and without blurring his remarkable cinematic idiom.
This meditation on spirituality, loneliness and accountability could touch your heart's core.
It drifts around in a slow circle like the houseboat on the lake, but patient audiences will find the trip worthwhile.
It's a harsh story told against a lush backdrop, sad without being sentimental and instructive without being preachy.
Don't be surprised if days after seeing this beautiful little film you discover it has taken up residence in your head.
This meditative character study is mesmerizing in its own peculiar way.
This is not a movie of action, but of meditation -- a tale that unfolds, like the seasons, allowing us time to explore its meaning and its mysteries.
The film's effect is magical, drawing its viewer in and causing it to grow, wilt, lust and despair through an entire life in 98 minutes
Thanks to first-rate performances, the lovely shifts of the seasons and the resourceful, minimalist script, the film gently holds the heart -- and ultimately moves it.
A balm for the soul and a reminder that even in the frenetic city, the cosmos has its own steady pendulum.
The film is most interesting when it bypasses the universality of its spiritual lessons and becomes culturally specific (a Buddhist 'sutra,' a ritual sucide...)
The film is only 98 minutes, but Kim is so meticulous in his storytelling that it seems as drawn out as the title.
| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 36% 36% | Angels & Demons |
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| Tomatometer Percentage | Movie |
|---|---|
| 32% 32% | Terminator Salvation |
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