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  • Last Online: 2 days ago
  • Location: ♨️
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  • Join Date: November 3, 2020
  • Awards Received: Finger Heart Award1
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If you take Love in the Big City's episode-6 relationship arc; combine it with episode 8's nostalgic, melancholic, and temporally disjointed remembrance of times past (and idealized expectations pulled back down to reality) on vacation in a foreign land; intensify the moody sense of loneliness and dislocation; make the humor a bit more subtle; keep the attention to grittier dimensions of gay life, the more explicit elements of gay sex, and the questionable maturity of the very flawed (i.e. human) protagonist; and you film the story in an art-house style; then you might get something like Happy Together.
Recommended by lietk12 - 17 days ago
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Both works depict challenges with being gay in South Korean society as well as experiences of familial relationships for gay people, and both works do so with a rather literary approach to writing (focusing on arranging words in a beautiful and profound way); a somewhat melancholic but also hopeful ending and overall emotional tone; and an achingly beautiful instrumental score for the soundtrack. The writing similarities are strongest with episodes 3-4 of "Love in the Big City", which (like "So Long, See You Tomorrow") makes heavy use of universe-related imagery.
Recommended by lietk12 - 18 days ago
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Both films examine questions about the meaning of family and the impact of money, through stories about a queer relationship across class differences in which one partner dies, leaving behind a partner and family members to grieve their passing.
Recommended by lietk12 - Sep 29, 2024
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Both films take a very figurative, "artsy", vibes-based approach to their narratives and themes, and both rely on subtle allusions to history. Both films place queerness (as a transgressive way of doing sexuality) in relation to migration and shadows cast by past conflicts, and both films do interesting things with temporality and spatiality.
Recommended by lietk12 - Sep 4, 2024
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In both films, the child of a queer parent unearths their parent's queer past by leaving home and, in doing so, changes the relationships around them in the direction of healing.
Recommended by lietk12 - Jul 21, 2024
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The overall plots of these two films have some interesting parallels and shared themes at a high level (including a story which bridges multiple decades of experience, a relationship between two high-schoolers which changes their relationship with a hostile world, and a separation which interrupts that relationship for a long time), and both locate their story in regionally-specific contexts. So Long, See You Tomorrow has less of the dramatic teenage angst of being a queer teen in a past decade (opting instead for a quieter form of teenage angst), a more meditative approach to its story, and a more hopeful and less bittersweet tone in its ending.
Recommended by lietk12 - Jul 14, 2024