Status
Released
original language
fr
Budget
$ 0
Revenue
$ 1594998

Freddie

Father

Tena

Aunt

Maxime

Andre

Grandmother

Dongwan "French-speaking friend"

Jiwan "The boy with the fringe"

Lucie

Kay-Kay

Hammond Employee in Seoul

Hammond Employee in Jeonju

Adoptive mother

Korean Birth Mother

The Father's Wife

Boy in Leopard Sweatshirt

Boy in Leather Jacket

"Paris Baguette" girl

"Your friend is original" girl

Party singer

Party Wrestler

Romanian Hotel Receptionist

Eldest Half-Sister

Younger Half-Sister

Neighbor on the Roof

Hammond Old Employee in Jeonju

Vintage Bar DJ

Hipster Looking For the Bathroom 1

Hipster Looking For the Bathroom 2

Tena's Father

Old Woman on the Street

Party DJ

Party Friend 1

Party Friend 2

Upscale Restaurant Server

Upscale Restaurant Boss

Bus Driver

Restaurant Server in Gunsan

Shoe Saleswoman

Hotel Bartender

Taxi Driver (voice)

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2023-05-15
I think I may have warmed to this film better had I not taken an instant dislike to "Freddie" (Park Ji-min). Now it's certainly a testament to this actor that she is able to successfully - and pretty immediately - engender a sense that her character is a rather selfish, manipulative and unpleasant individual; but I'm afraid I struggled to remain engaged as her troubled story of adoption and of her re-introduction to her birth family is played out over the next two hours. "Freddie" appears to have been happily brought up by a couple in France, so her increasingly thoughtless behaviour doesn't really have an anchor - and as we progress and she becomes more obnoxious - as exemplified by her final scene in the car with poor old "Maxime" (Yoann Zimmer) - I found the story has just about run out of merit. The acting is generally good. The efforts from her slightly dipso dad (Oh Kwang-rok) is convincing as he has to reconcile the discovery of his long-lost daughter with his dependency on the bottle and her own pretty obvious disdain for the man. It also offers us quite an interesting insight into just how adoptions worked as the decline of the French colonial system in post-war Korea led to many children being offered by parents who hoped that a childhood and education in France would offer greater opportunity, but again with "Freddie" that isn't really developed. What has turned her into this rather objectionable person is rather left aside. It has an element of "be careful what you wish for" to it, and is, at times, an interesting observation on the stresses of the post-adoption processes but I just didn't like or care about her and so my enthusiasm just waned.