High school gymnast Do Hyeon is ordered to perform community service as punishment for fighting. While doing this by serving as a library assistant, he meets Su Hyeon, a schoolgirl who borrows a lot of books. Finding her attractive, he talks to her and they gradually grow closer. This love between a teenage boy and girl looks cheerful enough, but they are both suffering in their own way. Do Hyeon's mother, a former actress, can't even recognize her own son now due to dementia-most of the time she mistakes him for her manager-and Su Hyeon isn't who she's pretending to be. Her real name is Se Yeong, and she's on a mission to understand the reason behind her friend Su Hyeon's suicide by reading all the books she borrows from the library. Will Do Hyeon carry on with his gymnastics? Can Se Yeong overcome her obsession with her dearly departed friend? Each of them faces new choices. Edit Translation
- English
- magyar / magyar nyelv
- dansk
- Norsk
Where to Watch Overman
Cast & Credits
- Chae Seo JinSoo HyeonMain Role
- Kim Jung Hyun Main Role
- Shin Woo HeeSoo HyeonSupport Role
- Kim Min SeokMin SikSupport Role
- Kim Chul YoonCoach YangSupport Role
- Shin Woo HeeSoo HyeonSupport Role
Reviews
The best way to describe my view on it is: it didn't flow well. The scenes between leads had this deep, melancholic vibe, but then there were some scenes incorporated here and there that felt amazingly out of place with how graphic and detailed they were. As if the writer didn't know if they want to keep everything vague and leave some parts for the viewers’ interpretation, or if they want to shock the viewers with some "realistic" and tragic plot points.
There was one scene, that was simply heavy emotional bomb dropped on me, but nothing followed after it. I had no chance to release the built tension since the ML didn't really do it either. It took me out of the movie completely. I had to pause and ask myself: what exactly have I just seen and why none of the characters truly reacts to it?
It wasn't exactly a short movie (average length) but it felt short because it lacked content. The portrayal of Alzheimer was superficial, taking into consideration the amount of scenes with the mother. They could have done a better job. Or leave out the majority of the scene and focus more on how the ML sees his situation and how he describes it to others.
My biggest problem was probably Do Hyeon. I saw him struggling, but it never felt like he did. I didn't feel sadness, resignation, doubt, fear... The only time I truly felt strong feelings from him was during the "emotional bomb" scene I mentioned earlier. Whatever his character was supposed to feel, I wasn't connecting with it.
The ending seemed rushed. We found out all the tragic details and background story and then again: nothing followed. They went straight to a semi-happy/semi-open ending.
Overall, it had good potential, but it left me with a conclusion that even the writer was not sure exactly what she wanted to portray in it and how she wanted to do it.
A thoughtful and memorable movie
I’ve watched Overman movie for a while ago but I still remember it, most of scenes. The story is simple but thoughtful and the acting of the actors (Kim Jung Hyun) and actresses are great. The rhythm is not slow, it’s detailed. Though the female director seems making it for young people but actually “would we be able to be overman (the best version of ourselves) ?” I wonder. Sometimes I wanna to have courage like Choi Do Hyun and his friend, keep moving forward.