May 07, 2012

Sopyonjie

It took enormous patience to sit through this slow pace film featured by regular and lengthy performance of a dying art form pansori. Accompanied only by a hint of drum, the traditional solo recital can sound rather monotonous, especially when the performer has to remain absolute passive throughout and voice becomes the only vehicle they can resort to. But despite the challenge to a foreign audience, it has a drawing power to keep you stay on to see what happens to those wanderers and guardians of a dying art. This is unexpected rewarded when the two siblings reunited briefly after years of separation and sat in the small rundown inn to perform the most challenging piece in their repertoire in great harmony and with repressed longing for each other. This is an exquisite film.