logo
Berlinale 2025 review: 'What Does That Nature Say to You' - Another Bear for Hong Sangsoo?

Berlinale 2025 review: 'What Does That Nature Say to You' - Another Bear for Hong Sangsoo?

Euronews21-02-2025
Is this the year the Berlinale finally gives South Korean filmmaker Hong Sangsoo the top prize?
In the last five years, the prolific director has won four gongs: Silver Bear for Best Director in 2020 for The Woman Who Ran; Silver Bear for Best Screenplay in 2021 for Introduction; Silver Bear Grand Jury Prize in 2022 for The Novelist's Film; and Silver Bear Grand Jury Prize in 2024 for A Traveler's Needs.
Berlin juries just can't get enough, and a Berlinale Competition line-up would seem apparently incomplete without a Hong joint. The lunatic drive to constantly put his films up for awards seems to be pointing in one direction: the festival really wants to give him the Golden Bear once and for all. And as groan-worthy as it has become to witness his patronage-levels of inclusion in Competition, there is a strong case to be made for Geu jayeoni nege mworago hani (What Does that Nature Say to You) winning the top ursine this year.
We'd rather The Blue Trail win it, but it can't be denied that unlike his last three films, which felt like the director was cranking out on auto-pilot and indulging in all the Hong hallmarks (casual chats, soju a-go-go, plenty of meandering artists complaining), his 33rd feature is a deftly scripted and properly layered affair. With all the trimmings, naturally.
Written, shot edited, sound designed, produced and directed by Hong, it starts with struggling thirty-something poet Donghwa (Ha Seongguk) driving his girlfriend of three years, Junhee (Kang Soyi) from Seoul to her parents' home outside Icheon. There, he discovers that her family house is bigger and fancier than he'd assumed. A chance encounter with Junhee's father Oryeong (Kwon Haehyo) in the driveway turns the casual drop-off into a lengthy day with the whole family. Everything goes swimmingly with the father and the sister, but small cracks start to come to light as the day progresses, culminating in a signature drunken outburst during a home-cooked dinner with the mother Sunhee (Cho Yunhee), who also writes poetry.
Essentially, it's Hong does Meet The Parents, and it's by far his most accomplished film since The Woman Who Ran.
In telling the story of a family slyly vetting a suitor, Hong addresses the role of the artist in contemporary society and the economic anxieties that entails, as well as the unspoken gripes within families – specifically Donghwa's own successful father, who seems to fuel within him a tension about his life and privilege. Since the film is shot in a deliberately casual, lo-res style that mimics the soft-focus in which Donghwa sees the world without his glasses, the audience are confronted with his headspace.
It's hard not to see the character as a cypher for the director, who was born into a filmmaking family, and the way Hong candidly stages this would-be-artist having to face up to himself and what he considers to be his full-fledged calling is not only thought-provoking but often endearingly funny.
There are repeated jokes about Donghwa's old car, his "artistic" moustache, and the third act in particular is highly entertaining – highlights being the in soju veritas dinner moment ('well, he completely flunked the alcohol test') and the withering post-mortem about the potential son-in-law, conducted by the direct mother and the affable father. Both Kwon Haehyo and Cho Yunhee run away with it.
'A life spent pursuing beauty is great… right?' asks Donghwa, clearly trying to reassure himself.
It is great and worth pursuing, even if you have to address whether you may be guilty of indulging in overly romantic notions instead of truly connecting to your surroundings.
And what about a life spent pursuing the Golden Bear?
We'll find out on results night this weekend.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

‘Baby Shark' song not plagiarised, South Korean top court rules
‘Baby Shark' song not plagiarised, South Korean top court rules

Euronews

time7 days ago

  • Euronews

‘Baby Shark' song not plagiarised, South Korean top court rules

South Korea's Supreme Court ruled today that the globally popular children's song 'Baby Shark' was not plagiarised, ending a six-year legal battle over an American composer's copyright claim. US composer Jonathan Wright accused South Korean kids content company Pinkfong of copying elements from his own earlier version of the tune. He filed a lawsuit in Seoul in 2019 and sought 30 million won (approx. €18,500) in compensation. Wright, also known as Johnny Only, released his version in 2011, four years before Pinkfong's, but both were based on a traditional melody popular for years at children's summer camps in the United States. South Korea's top court upheld lower court rulings dating back to 2021 and 2023 that found no sufficient grounds to conclude Pinkfong infringed on Jonathan Wright's copyright. Throughout the case's prolonged run, the courts consistently ruled Wright's version did not differ enough from the original melody to qualify as an original creative work eligible for copyright protection, and that Pinkfong's song had clear differences from Wright's. The Supreme Court said its ruling reaffirms the established legal principle on existing folk tunes as derivative work. 'The Supreme Court accepts the lower court's finding that the plaintiff's song did not involve substantial modifications to the folk tune related to the case to the extent that it could be regarded, by common social standards, as a separate work,' it said in a statement. Pinkfong said in a statement to that the ruling confirmed its version of 'Baby Shark' was based on a 'traditional singalong chant' that was in the public domain. The company said it gave the tune a fresh twist by adding 'an upbeat rhythm and catchy melody, turning it into the pop culture icon it is today.' Chong Kyong-sok, Wright's South Korean attorney, said he hadn't received the full version of the court's ruling yet, but called the outcome 'a little disappointing.' 'Anyway, the matter is now settled,' he said. 'It's our work that came out first, so we can handle the licensing on our side and I guess we then each go our separate ways.' Pinkfong's 'Baby Shark' became a global phenomenon after it was released on YouTube in 2015. A year later, the company uploaded a second video which showed two child actors doing hand movements on the song's catchy "doo doo doo doo doo doo" hook. 'Baby Shark Dance' became the most-viewed YouTube video of all time, now exceeding 16 billion views. The song was also featured in various cultural products, including in The Angry Birds Movie 2 and in TV series The Umbrella Academy. 'Baby Shark' remains a crucial product for Pinkfong, which earned 45.1 billion won ($32.6 million) in revenue in the first half of 2025, according to its regulatory filing. The company has turned the five-member shark family - Baby Shark, Mama Shark, Papa Shark, Grandma Shark, and Grandpa Shark - into TV and Netflix shows, films, smartphone apps and globally touring musicals.

Old photo misrepresented as Lee Jae Myung's recent vacation
Old photo misrepresented as Lee Jae Myung's recent vacation

AFP

time05-08-2025

  • AFP

Old photo misrepresented as Lee Jae Myung's recent vacation

A post shared on Facebook on August 4, 2025 claimed the photo showed Lee and First Lady Kim Hye Kyung enjoying a holiday at the beach. Text seen in the screenshot reads: "The president is on vacation, Lee Jae Myung and first lady Kim Hye Kyung" and "Watersports are best when the country is flooded." The post surfaced as torrential rains triggered flooding and caused damage across parts of South Korea (archived link). Image Screenshot of the misleading Facebook post, captured August 4, 2025. Orange X added by AFP Other posts sharing the same image suggest it was taken as Lee is on summer leave from August 4 to 8 in the coastal South Gyeongsang province, South Korean newspaper Hankyoreh reported, citing the presidential office (archived link). "People are dying and this guy is photographed in a swimsuit, how can we call him our leader," reads one comment left in the post. Another comment reads, "The economy is dying and people are suffering but he chooses to take a swim." But the photo is old and does not show Lee on holiday in 2025. Combined reverse image and keyword searches show the same picture was posted to Lee's verified Facebook account on August 28, 2017 (archived link). Image Screenshot comparison between the photo shared with the misleading claim (left) and the original photo posted in August 2017 on Lee's Facebook page (right) In the caption, he wrote about filming for the reality show "Same Bed, Different Dreams," a program featuring celebrity couples which aired that month on SBS (archived link). A segment from the show available on YouTube shows Lee and Kim wearing the same swimsuits while surfing at the beach (archived link). At the time, Lee was serving as mayor of Seongnam, a city south of Seoul. Similar photos of the couple at the beach were also published in multiple local reports about the TV program at the time (archived here and here). Lee is a frequent target of disinformation online which AFP previously debunked multiple times.

Jisoo's back again for latest Self-Portrait campaign
Jisoo's back again for latest Self-Portrait campaign

Fashion Network

time24-07-2025

  • Fashion Network

Jisoo's back again for latest Self-Portrait campaign

​ Self-Portrait loves its K-pop connections and theLondon fashion house is back with a campaign starring South Korean superstar actress and singer Jisoo for autumn/winter 2025. It marks the fourth season she's fronted the brand's global imagery and this time Jisoo is reimagined as 'an icon of the swinging sixties', first for the pre-fall campaign and then for autumn/winter 2025. Shot once again by Drew Vickers, 'she moves through imagined cityscapes brought to life through [Vickers'] signature use of generative image-making, unfolding across luminous, neon-lit metropolises', we're told. And there's nothing but praise for the campaign's star from Self-Portrait founder and creative director Han Chong: 'There's something so effortless about working with Jisoo because she doesn't need to perform or overthink anything, she has a presence that draws people in. 'Each season we've created a world around her and this campaign continues the story, taking it into a new dimension. Her community have been so engaged with everything we've done together, and I hope they'll be excited by how the story has evolved across the two seasons.' Throughout the campaign, she wears a curated selection of looks from the AW25 collection including a black 3D crepe flower mini dress, a white lace signature mini, a grey wool knit playsuit, and a black floral lace midi skirt. Other standout pieces include a black bouclé jacket with fur cuffs, belted knit leggings, a black metallic pussy-bow blouse, and blue barrel-leg jeans. Accessories include black croc-effect micro and mini bags.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store