52 Films by Women Vol 7. 47. PAST LIVES (Director: Celine Song)
What does it mean
when you say to your partner, ‘we’re meant to be together’? This sentiment is
expressed sometimes in repose, sometimes in the waning of a lost argument, a
pitiful despatch of the final life raft. I have my own thoughts on the subject.
The more romantic will incline towards the film, Past Lives, written
and directed by Celine Song, which explores to some extent whether
relationships are destined to persist. Song’s film features Greta Lee as Nora
Moon (born Na Young), a playwright who reconnects with the Korean boy, Hae Sung
(Teo Yoo) who she last saw in person twenty-four years ago.
Nora didn’t ‘leave’
Hae Sung. She was separated from him by her parents who relocated to Toronto;
her father is a film director. But you know kids – especially precocious ones.
They’ll claim the decisions made by others as their own. Koreans, in line with
many nationalities, are known for formality and repressed emotions, the latter
released with the lethality of steam from a broken pipe. They know what it is
to play it cool, with emphasis on the pretence.
Past Lives begins with a conversation about the central
characters as observed by an unseen couple. Sitting next to Nora and Hae Sung
is the author, Arthur Zaturansky (John Magaro). I imagine Song’s mentoring
conversations. ‘What are you going to call your author?’ ‘Arthur.’ ‘No,
author.’ ‘Arthur is a good name.’
‘Who do you imagine
they are?’ one observer asks. They run through the permutations. Brother,
sister, sister’s wife. Husband, wife, tour guide. Tour guide? At four in the
morning? During the conversation, the camera moves towards Nora, until she
looks directly into it. The unseen couple, we imagine, settle their bill
rapidly.
Cut to twenty-four
years earlier. Twelve-year-old Hae Sung (Seung Min Yim) is walking classmate Na
Young (Moon Seung-ah) home from school. Na Young is distraught. ‘Why are you
crying?’ he asks. ‘Is it because you came second in the test, and I came
first?’ Na Young doesn’t want to come second to anyone. She wants to win - win.
(No apologies for the Breakfast
Club reference.) At home, she
and her sister want to swap their new names. Father, who has been surprised
while he is having a cigarette – ‘stay over there, children,’ he warns them,
cognisant of the health risks of tobacco but still unable to help himself
(that’s a case study right there) has a suggestion. ‘Nora – from Leonora’. Na
Young is sold. Na Young’s mother has another idea. ‘Is there a boy at school
that you like?’ Na Young nods. ‘How about a date?’
You shouldn’t be
entirely surprised to learn that dating twelve-year-old Korean style involves
parental supervision. Hae Sung and Na Young go to a park that has a tall
mechanical statue of a man whose mouth opens and closes. The two children play
peek-a-boo (or the worst game of hide and seek ever) within a wall that has the
features of a face cut into it. (Sometimes, watching a movie, you want to know
the name of the location; I would want my children to play there as well –
safer than Amsterdam.) Na Young’s mother explains that the family is migrating.
‘I want to make good memories of Korea [for Na Young],’ she adds. An act of
cruelty if you ask me.
There is one final
walk home from school in near silence. Na Young, who had expressed her desire
to win the Nobel Prize – ‘you can’t win the Nobel Prize in Korea,’ she explains
– stands three steps above Hae Sung and says plaintively, ‘bye’. Hae Sung nods.
Song might have cut to Hae Sung’s face as he hears his friend say goodbye, but
her camera placement is restrained, as if a close-up would be intrusive. This
choice is typical of her direction, as if wanting to keep the audience
guessing; the less the camera does, the more the audience projects. To quote
Song’s own line, her direction is very Korean.
On the plane, Na
Young and her sister practice their limited English before the family present
their passports at Toronto Pearson Airport, the first of two scenes in front of
a customs official. The formality of conversations with an official is also, it
seems to me, very Korean.
A caption: ‘twelve
years pass’. Nora is now a twenty-four-year-old aspiring writer in New York
City. Hae Sung, on the other hand, is on his military service, one of many
soldiers in green uniform on an exercise and settling down in a makeshift
trench for some grub. The scene might have been a budget stretcher, but Song
wants to emphasise Hae Sung’s conformity. We see him out with some friends. One
of them is crying, having broken up with a girl. The convention is that the
young men should get very drunk together. Hae Sung has posted on the Facebook
page for Nora’s father’s latest film that he is looking for Na Young. Nora
responds. The pair engage in a series of video calls, scarcely believing that
they are back in touch. Nora explains that she now wants to win the Pulitzer
Prize - a reduction in ambition. Both are rigidly staying put. Whatever they
feel about each other, Nora has no intention of returning to Korea. Hae Sung
has no desire to emigrate. He wants to learn Chinese (‘for my job’, he
explains). At a certain point, Nora ends their chats.
Lest Act Two be a
complete anti-climax, Nora accepts an artists’ residency. There she meets
Arthur, who arrives later than she did and has ‘the worst room’. (Well, Nora
wants to be first in everything.) There is instant attraction, at least on
Nora’s side. Later, Arthur will wonder whether he is Nora’s ‘immigrant dream’.
Another caption:
‘twelve years pass’. Arthur and Nora present themselves to customs officials,
having just returned from Toronto to visit Nora’s parents. They are married.
Occupation: ‘we’re writers.’ You can account for a lot of time with scenes in
front of customs officials, but just think of how they could bare their hearts
whilst submitting a tax return.
Arthur is now a
published author. Nora has a play in rehearsal, one that reflects her migrant
experience. Hae Sung is visiting New York City. He is in a relationship, but it
is on pause. Reuniting with Nora, he explains that he is an only child. His girlfriend
has to find out whether she can marry someone richer than he is, more
successful. Hae Sung describes himself
as ordinary, adding ‘the conditions [for marriage] are not met’. At one point,
Nora and Hae Sung stand in front of a carousel, a symbol of love’s merry go
round, or emotional agnosticism. However, they don’t climb aboard it. They are
not trying to relive their childhood in that way.
Which brings finally
to the question of providence, or rather In-Yun, the concept that individuals
are doomed to repeat the relationship they had in their (presumed) past lives
(hence the film’s title). Just as the unseen couple speculate about the
relationship between Arthur, Hae Sung and Nora, so Hae Sung wonders what he was
once to Nora in their previous incarnations. Maybe he was a courtier to her
queen and their relationship was forbidden. The one thing you can say about
past lives is that you always imagine that your life was grander and more
dramatic than it is now. That is part of the fun.
On their second day
together, Nora and Hae Sung visit the Statue of Liberty. Later, Arthur will
say, ‘I have never been’. If you enjoy liberty, you have no desire to visit a
monument to it. We see behind Hae Sung, a
tourist posing for a photograph. Memorialising a trip somehow makes it banal;
there is something to said for a photograph literally stealing life.
Arthur finally meets
Hae Sung. Arthur greets him in Korean – Nora confesses that she visited Korea,
but Hae Sung was away. Hae Sung responds in English. What would Hae Sung like
to eat. ‘Pasta,’ he replies enthusiastically.
Song resolves the
drama beautifully. To Hae Sung, Nora is the woman who leaves. To Nora (from Hae
Sung’s point of view), Arthur is the man who stays. Hae Sung wishes he didn’t
like Arthur so much. (Maybe he should read Arthur’s novel.) The near final scene
involves an Uber and a brief but telling wait, Hae Sung standing with his
pull-along suitcase.
In a very literal
sense, not much happens in Past
Lives. Yet it resonates. From a
western perspective, it is about a doomed relationship about a woman who has
outgrown the man who remained obsessed with her for twenty-four years based on them
hanging out together as children. Hae Sung’s justification is that Na Young’s
personality was formed by the age of twelve. Nora remains unknown to us. Her
ambition to be a writer isn’t based on anything but her sense of competition.
Her characteristic is an embarrassment about liking someone who became a
typical Korean; the inference is that she finds Hae Sung dull. Just because
someone has feelings for you and you have a shared history, it doesn’t mean you
have to fall for them. Hae Sung didn’t pass Nora’s bar. Hae Sung was there when
Na Young needed him - but so what? Past
Lives plays like a romance, but
it is as unromantic a film as you could ever hope to watch. Who needs flowers
when you end up in the East Village?
Reviewed at Haus der Berliner Festspiele, Sunday 26 February 2023, 09:30am; also Sundance London, Monday 3 July 2023, Picturehouse Central Screen Three, 15:30 screening.
Review originally published on Bitlanders.com
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