If the Sun Rises in the West

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If the Sun Rises in the West
If the Sun Rises in the West film poster.jpg
Theatrical poster
Directed by Lee Eun
Produced by Hwang Jae-woo
Written by Kim Hyun-seok
Starring Im Chang-jung
Ko So-young
Music by Jo Yeong-wook
Kim Gyu-yang
Cinematography Byun Hee-sung
Edited by Ko Im-pyo
Production
company
Myeong Film Co.
Distributed by Il-Sin Investment
Release dates
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  • 19 December 1998 (1998-12-19)
Running time
100 minutes
Country South Korea
Language Korean

If the Sun Rises in the West (Hangul해가 서쪽에서 뜬다면; RRHaega seojjog-eseo tteundamyeon) is a 1998 South Korean film, and was the commercial directorial debut of Lee Eun.[1]

Plot

Beom-soo is a traffic control officer who aspires to become a baseball umpire. By chance he meets Hyun-joo, a theatre major who crashes her car into a tree while he is on duty. Instead of fining her, Beom-soo gives her driving lessons and they soon become friends, exchanging letters with each other when Hyun-joo returns to university. When they next meet in person Beom-soo declares his love for her, only for Hyun-joo to reject him as she plans to go overseas to study.

Three years later, Beom-soo is making his debut as a professional baseball umpire, and his feelings of love are reignited when he realises that up-and-coming actress Yoo Ha-rin is none other than Hyun-joo. The two are eventually reunited via the baseball field and resume their relationship, though Hyun-joo's affections are also pursued by Ji-min, the president of an advertising company for which she has appeared in a series of commercials. Hyun-joo eventually rejects Ji-min and shows up at the opening game of the Korean Series to throw the first ball, where she kisses Beom-soo in the middle of the field.

Cast

Release

If the Sun Rises in the West opened in South Korea on 19 December 1998, and received a total of 145,752 admission in Seoul.[2]

Critical response

Andrew Saroch of Far East Films compared the film favourably to Richard Curtis' Notting Hill, and said, "[If the Sun Rises in the West] accomplishes its modest directives and creates two characters we quickly warm to throughout their moments together. Lee Eun utilises tried-and-tested genre techniques, but it is hard to be too resistant to these when the story moves along so effortlessly." He also praised lead actress Ko So-young, saying that she "illuminates this popularist fable and lends her character some much needed humanity."[3]

References

  1. "<The Night Before Strike (Paupjeonya)> (1990)". Korean Film Archive. Retrieved on 19 January 2009.
  2. Paquet, Darcy. "Films Released in 1998". Koreanfilm.org. Retrieved on 19 January 2009.
  3. Saroch, Andrew. "If The Sun Rose In The West". Far East Films. Retrieved on 19 January 2009.

External links