Cafe Noir


Cafe Noir is a 2009 South Korean romance melodrama film starring Shin Ha-kyun, Moon Jeong-hee, Kim Hye-na and Jung Yu-mi. Written and directed by first-time director Jung Sung-il, a well regarded film critic-turned-director, it is a contemplation on love and heartbreak largely based on two works of literature - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's The Sorrows of Young Werther and Fyodor Dostoyevsky's White Nights. The critically acclaimed work debuted at the 66th Venice Film Festival in 2009, and Jung was nominated for New Talent Grand Pix at the 2010 Copenhagen International Film Festival.

Synopsis

Young-soo, a music teacher, has an affair with his student's mother, Mi-yeon. He becomes desperate when Mi-yeon decides to end their relationship following the return of her husband. He tries to kill the husband and when it fails, he realizes that for the happiness of the woman he loves, he must leave her.
Later, Young-soo meets a young woman Sun-hwa by chance, who is waiting for her lover on the bridge for a year. He begins to see her every day and falls for her. Just when she decides to give up thinking that her lover does not love her anymore, he suddenly appears on the bridge. They leave together happily, leaving Young-soo behind.

Cast

Cafe Noir was screened for a full year at various events of the festival circuit before it was given a domestic release in late December 2010. The DVD was finally released in June 2012.
Modern Korean Cinema: "Cafe Noir is nothing short of astounding. It is a breathtaking and ambitious work that, in its own intellectualized fashion, manages to thrill and titillate...a feast for the eyes and the senses but most of all, the mind."
Screen Anarchy: "...Cafe Noir is a truly astounding cinematic examination of unrequited love."
Variety: "...much of Cafe Noir feels frustratingly obscure, with the pic's listless surface story far less interesting..."