[Movie Review] Soulmate shines as it paints a dark portrait of friends
by Dramaddictally
In a story that understands not all relationships are linear, two childhood best friends embark on vastly different life journeys, but keep colliding with each other along the way. Toying with ideas of art and authenticity, the film makes us question our heroines intertwined lives right up until the very end.
MOVIE REVIEW
Soulmate is a lot about contrasts. Hazy, fantasy-like scenes are braided together with darkly realistic moments. Stories and lies are often mistaken for true life experiences. And opposite emotions – friendship and rivalry, closeness and distance, even love and hate – are shown to be inexplicably linked when it comes to our most enduring relationships. As one character points out, shadows exist because of the sunlight.
Released theatrically in March of this year and now available for streaming, the film follows two young friends as they make their way to adulthood and navigate the life beyond. It’s a subtle tale that marks its life transitions with fractures so tiny they remain almost imperceptible to the audience — and to the main characters. By the time the damage is done, they (and we) are asking, “How did we end up like this?”
Our protagonists, AHN MI-SO (Kim Da-mi) and GO HA-EUN (Jeon So-ni), meet as pre-teens (played beautifully by Kim Soo-hyung and Ryu Jian as their respective younger selves) when Mi-so arrives to a Jeju classroom after transferring from Seoul. Right from day one, the girls are inseparable – complimenting opposite aspects of each other and picking up the slack where the other might falter.
The two are so close that when Mi-so’s mother decides to up and leave town again, Mi-so stays in Jeju with Ha-eun, rather than have her life uprooted continually. And from the beginning, this seemingly slight, almost-hidden difference has a big impact on the ways their lives play out. While outwardly they grow up like sisters, the reality is that they’re not. Mi-so has been abandoned while Ha-eun has her parents’ love. This isn’t an explanation for their behavior, but rather, it’s one of the small crevices that will deceptively add to the major crack between them.
Years flash forward and we see them as high school seniors, with Mi-so outspoken and defiant and Ha-eun quieter but eager to follow Mi-so’s trouble-ready lead. Both girls are artists and Mi-so’s dream is to travel the world and paint – living hard and burning out early like Janis Joplin. Ha-eun, though, is afraid to fly, and so she declines when Mi-so gives her the hypothetical offer of traveling the world together someday. Ha-eun is so timid that even though she’s great at drawing, she plans to follow her father’s wishes and become a teacher instead.
As we start to see the tracks laid for how their paths might diverge, the biggest breach of them all appears in the form of a boy: HAM JIN-WOO (Byun Woo-seok). He’s Ha-eun’s crush – and will be a life-long source of problems for the two best friends.
At the outset, there are signs of trouble. Jin-woo isn’t initially aware of Ha-eun’s existence and Mi-so (not subtly) pushes him into dating her. But it’s clear even in their first conversation – which is about Ha-eun – that Jin-woo is attracted to Mi-so. Once he and Ha-eun are firmly in a relationship, the duo becomes a trio, spending all their free time together and enjoying their final summer of youth. It isn’t long before all those playful hours culminate in a forbidden kiss that shakes Mi-so badly enough to send her fleeing to Seoul to embark on the next phase of her life.
From here, the split in the friends’ lives becomes blatant but the real reasons for it aren’t clarified until the end – when both women have had time to contend with their own lives. We see Mi-so living a bohemian lifestyle, working odd jobs and taking painting classes, until she’s ditched by whatever guy she’s taken up with and told by her art teacher that her paintings are mediocre. Yet, for five years, she writes letters back to Ha-eun, fabricating a successful life and lying about all the world travel she’s doing.
Back in Jeju, Ha-eun stays the course on her teaching career and continues her relationship with Jin-woo. All the while, she receives letters and postcards from Mi-so, and is glassy-eyed over the life Mi-so is living without her. One day, out of the blue, Mi-so arrives in Jeju and the two old friends hug and gulp back their tears without saying a word.
Their happiness to see each other is short-lived, however, when Ha-eun witnesses the way Mi-so lives – the things she does for money – and becomes judgmental. The tension rises until they’re both speaking out loud the feelings they’ve been holding secret for all these years. Jealousy, rivalry, pity, contempt – before they’ve even started dinner, Ha-eun is up from the table and leaving the restaurant and it’s clear the rift is too big to repair.
Time pushes forward again and we see Mi-so try to make a stable life for herself only to be knocked into chaos time after time. When she’s dealt a horrible blow, Jin-woo is the one to pick her up – even though he’s engaged to Ha-eun. This last betrayal leads to the movie’s climax – a fight which takes place in Jin-woo’s small, cramped apartment bathroom – where a drunk Mi-so is sobered up by the cold, hard reality of what’s happened to her friendship with Ha-eun.
The scene is quite brilliant in its nuance and also serves as a turning point for the characters as well as the audience. While Mi-so has had the harder life, Ha-eun has been the more sympathetic character. At this point, Ha-eun’s true colors come out when it’s clear she’s known Mi-so’s core weakness all along. Afterward, as they pick up the shattered pieces of their lives, they both change tracks, seemingly gaining from each other what they lack in themselves, just like they did as children.
Soulmate is gripping in its first half to three-quarters, but lags in the final stretch where it moves away from plausibility and toward melodrama to close out the story. Still, its questioning of what it means to be a soulmate is solid, with two women whose lives touch and disperse from each other continually in a tiding journey about friendship, family, love – and all the shadow sides that make the good parts shine brighter.
We’re told in the opening sequence that Ha-eun’s drawing style is called “hyper-realism” – a method by which the penciled portrait looks like a photo. With cinematography that moves from lovely washed-out colors to grainy shots that conjure the sticky summer heat – as well as a slight, resonant narrative – the movie lands in hyper-realistic territory itself. Following its painterly eye, we come to see the contrasts that make our heroines’ lives so painful and yet so beautiful.
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Tags: Byun Woo-seok, Jeon So-ni, Kim Da-mi, movie review
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1 Kurama
September 19, 2023 at 7:31 AM
I remembered I wachted the Taiwan movie and the Chinese drama, I'm not sure I want another one version.
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2 MikeyD signed up
September 19, 2023 at 7:37 AM
I watched this film as soon as I had access to it for Ki, Da-mi, but really the standout performance comes from costar Jeon So-ni. Truly excellent acting. Yes, as the film progressed my mind did go to where the story would had gone if it had been an American film. I had to keep reminding myself I was watching a Korean adaptation of a Chinese film so it would naturally be following different tropes and have different expectations.
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Minnie🫘👩🏻🚀Pioneer and Teacher 👩🏻🏫🌱🏹
September 19, 2023 at 10:18 AM
Jeon So nee is a remarkable actress. She has been underutilized I feel.
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DancingEmma
May 6, 2024 at 12:13 PM
I agree. But I also really get and appreciate Kim Dami’s prickly, hiding sorrows from the world through a tough exterior image. I loved her in “Our beloved summer” even if many beanies didn’t.
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Minnie🫘👩🏻🚀Pioneer and Teacher 👩🏻🏫🌱🏹
May 6, 2024 at 4:44 PM
I have a strange thing going on with Kim Da Mi. I don't like to see her on screen, I do not know why, but she is fabulous actress, one of the best really. She grew so much on me in Our Beloved Summer that I ended up rewatching it just for her.
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DancingEmma
May 6, 2024 at 4:47 PM
I’m happy you watched her despite the initial aversion. I hope the aversion is now history.
She is indeed a very good actor. In my view, one of the best too.
3 parkchuna 🍉
September 19, 2023 at 7:47 PM
I didn’t really understand the movie’s ending..
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Minnie🫘👩🏻🚀Pioneer and Teacher 👩🏻🏫🌱🏹
May 6, 2024 at 5:03 PM
• SPOILER Please scroll if you do not want to know the end.
Mi-So creates an alternate world where, in her mind, Ha-Eun is alive, doing what she wanted to do - paint and travel the world. While raising Ha-Eun's daughter, Mi-So updates Ha-Eun's blogs, paints and does exhibitions, and lets people believe that it's all Ha-Eun's work. The last scene is possibly a depiction of Ha-Eun's spirit, traversing across the icy land of Lake Baikal, a place where she dreamed of visiting.
Mi-So lets Jin-Woo back into her life, so he could have some kind of relationship with his daughter. Mi-So hides from him that Ha-Eun is dead, putting an end to all speculations that she would ever allow him to have any importance in her own life.
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parkchuna 🍉
May 8, 2024 at 7:35 AM
Thank you Minnie!
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4 Lostpanda is celebrating My Ajusshi 💔
September 19, 2023 at 9:05 PM
I watched the 2016 Chinese version on Viki and I liked it. Is the K version any different or worth watching if I’ve already seen the C version?
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PYC
September 19, 2023 at 11:12 PM
That’s my question too. I like the original Chinese movie from which the Korean version is adapted - but is it more of the same or different? I’d certainly think the two female leads in the K-version are well worth watching.
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Anita
April 6, 2024 at 5:48 PM
I’ve not watched the Chinese version though buh I will tell the Korean version is worth watching
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Minnie🫘👩🏻🚀Pioneer and Teacher 👩🏻🏫🌱🏹
May 6, 2024 at 6:16 PM
I have seen both.
So, some scenes are frame by frame copy of the Chinese, but where it differs greatly is the treatment of the relationship, and the characters of Ha-Eun and Mi-So. The chinese Mi-So and Korean Mi-So were very similar, but I loved the interpretation of Korean Ha-Eun. In the original, Ha-Eun was stronger of the two, and somewhat selfish. In the Korean version, Ha-Eun was softer, someone who had let everyone around her walk over her. So her quest for freedom was more believable.
The chinese actor who played Jin-Woo was phenomenal. You see his struggle between both the women, but in the end, you can't really sympathise with him, even though he makes sacrifices that Korean Jin-Woo does not.
I also loved the Korean dialogues more but the production value of the Chinese one is better.
It's worth a watch.
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5 jillian
September 20, 2023 at 1:12 PM
I would like to watch this. Which streaming site is this available on?
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MikeyD signed up
September 20, 2023 at 11:03 PM
I just looked, it can be rented on Youtube movies, Apple TV, Amazon Video.
There's also 'the streaming site that shall not be named'. Because Streaming a DRAMA on that site isn't COOL.
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jillian
September 20, 2023 at 11:08 PM
Thanks a lot for sharing! 😊
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Minnie🫘👩🏻🚀Pioneer and Teacher 👩🏻🏫🌱🏹
May 6, 2024 at 6:19 PM
If you are in US, then you watch it on Tubi and Plex (as long as you don't mind some ads).
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6 MikeyD signed up
September 20, 2023 at 11:18 PM
I just now recalled the Louis Malle film 'Damage' (1992) starring Jeremy Irons and Juliette Binoche. It comes to mind because the film ends with the male lead sitting in a white room with an entire wall covered by a huge picture of his son, rather like the huge portrait of Mi-so. Wow, that was a tiny corner of my brain I hadn't accessed in 30 years!
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7 Minnie🫘👩🏻🚀Pioneer and Teacher 👩🏻🏫🌱🏹
May 6, 2024 at 7:41 AM
Why Byun Woo Seok didn't leave an impression on me in Soulmate.
The DB discussion on Byun Woo Seok had me mulling why someone like BWS left such little impact in a movie where he was the only male and had an equal number of scenes with both the leading ladies. His character was layered and suffered from confusing emotions, yet he was almost like a background shadow. To understand this, I watched Soulmate again yesterday (a part of me also wanted to rediscover BWS, but I digress).
Spoiler alert:
The movie has three main characters:
Mi-So (Kim Da-Mi)
Ha-Eun (Jeon So-Nee)
Jin Woo (Byun Woo Seok)
Mi-So and Ha-Eun are best friends, and it's their journey.
Jin-Woo is Ha-Eun's crush and eventual boyfriend.
The complications start when Mi-So learns Ha-Eun has a crush on Jin-Woo, waylays him while walking to school, and sternly warns him to be good to Ha-Eun and not play with her. It has to be long-term or nothing.
While Ha-Eun and Jin-Woo end up being together soon after, Jin-Woo can't shake off his attraction to Mi-Soo, even though he seems to be in a committed relationship with Ha-Eun. Then, one day, he crosses the line and tries to kiss Mi-Soo, who rejects his advances. Curiously, while she bites and kicks him, the next moment, she asks for his good-luck charm necklace - a jujube necklace - so she can live longer (for some reason, Mi-So is convinced she will die by 27). We learn later that Ha-Eun had witnessed the incident but never confronted any of them about it.
Whether it is guilt or plain unwillingness to muddy her friend's relationship waters, Mi-So leaves Jeju with a guy, citing her desire to paint and travel the world (both women are artists).
That jujube necklace symbolises betrayal between friends and creates a rift. In Mi-So's mind, Ha-Eun has everything - a loving family, money, security and a boyfriend. She has nothing, and taking a jujube necklace from her friend's boyfriend, who also has an unhealthy crush on her, should not be a big deal. Mi-So creates a make-believe world where she is having the time of her life travelling the world and writes to Ha-Eun about them, while in reality, she is scrubbing toilets and washing dishes for survival. At the same time, Ha-Eun can only sigh wistfully over her friend's fun existence while she is mired in the mundane, comfortable life of a teacher and girlfriend of a successful man.
When the truth rears its ugly head, it's quits for the friends. Here is where the whole story turns on its head. Eventually, we realise that it wasn't as much about Ji-Woo's betrayal that hurt Ha-Eun but rather the distance it created between her and Mi-So.
Jin-Woo is a chaotic character throughout. He remains committed to Ha-Eun, but he can never truly let go of his attraction to Mi-So. He is bright and prosperous and becomes a doctor, but he still makes choices that are strange at best and questionable at worst.
One day, he chances upon Mi-So in a...
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Minnie🫘👩🏻🚀Pioneer and Teacher 👩🏻🏫🌱🏹
May 6, 2024 at 7:41 AM
One day, he chances upon Mi-So in a vulnerable situation. He takes her home (she has been thrown out of her home after her lover loses her money and commits suicide) without telling Ha-Eun. He ignores Ha-Eun's calls and does not respond to messages while supporting Mi-So, who is drowned in drunken misery over her situation. Ha-Eun eventually flies in from Jeju and finds her fiance helping a drunk Mi-So to his apartment. In a rare exhibition of assertion, Ha-Eun takes Mi-So in and locks Jin-Woo out of his own apartment.
The two friends end up having a long, heart-wrenching discussion about what went wrong with them (it's a spectacular scene). They clear the air but don't make up.
Later, Mi-So cuts the cord with Jin-Woo by returning his jujube necklace and thanking him for helping her. In turn, Jin-Woo finally returns to Ha-Eun. She accepts him back, only to reject him at the altar on her wedding day when she realises he does not get her and perhaps finally understands that she does not want to lead a 'normal life'.
There is still a lot more left to the story. But this post is about why BWS didn't make an impression, even though this character was remarkably complex. On my second watch, I was sad that my impressions of him didn't improve much.
The situational understanding of his conflicting emotions is clear; BWS himself does not bring much to the character. There are many missed opportunities. It's unclear what makes him stick to Ha-Eun when it's apparent that Mi-So interests him. Is he looking for domesticity from Ha-Eun and forbidden fun from Mi-So?
He looks sad and seems bland in places where he should have shown passion or pathos. He is capable of both, so I don't know why he is so wooden in many crucial scenes. The chemistry between the women is off the charts, while his chemistry with both women is meh. It could be the director's intent to keep him like that because eventually, we realise that while he, in his own way, loved both the women, none of them were really into him because all they needed was each other.
In the end, Soulmate was a miss for BWS, and I am thrilled The Lovely Runner happened for him.
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DancingEmma
May 6, 2024 at 12:23 PM
I haven’t been able to find this movie but read a thoughtful article that raised the issue of a same sex love relationship which couldn’t be told due to the prevailing reality of how queer women are rendered invisible in SK both in RL and in entertainment. At least, the BLs exist and thrive in SK but try and see if you can find an equivalent genre depicting queer women.
The writer echoed your views about BWS’ character and stated that in their view, the writer intended for him to be regarded as an ultimately redundant person in their lives. Miso and Haeun were always the loves of each others’ lives.
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Minnie🫘👩🏻🚀Pioneer and Teacher 👩🏻🏫🌱🏹
May 6, 2024 at 4:52 PM
There were a couple of very interesting allegorical scenes that might allude to Ha-Eun's real feelings for Mi-So, but it's very subtle and you can depict it either way.
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