Phim my wife got married review năm 2024

Bạn sẽ xử sự thế nào nếu bỗng một ngày vợ bạn nói rằng cô ấy muốn lấy một người đàn ông khác trong khi vẫn muốn chung sống cùng bạn? Bạn sẽ chấp nhận hay cạch không bao giờ thèm nhìn mặt cô ấy nữa? Chắc phần lớn các ông chồng sẽ chọn phương án 2. Bộ phim “Vợ tôi lấy chồng” sản xuất năm 2008 đã biến ý tưởng kỳ quặc này thành hiện thực qua hình ảnh một người chồng chấp nhận để vợ mình kết hôn với người khác.

Ngay từ cái nhìn đầu tiên, Deok-hoon đã mê đắm cô gái In-ah xinh đẹp, thông minh và mê bóng đá không kém bất cứ đấng mày râu nào. Đối với Deok-hoon, In-ah là người phụ nữ hoàn hảo nhất, lý tưởng nhất mà anh từng gặp từ trước tới nay. Nhưng rắc rối ở chỗ là In-ah sống quá phóng khoáng và không chịu chấp nhận chế độ hôn nhân một vợ một chồng. Một hôm, In-ha thú nhận với Deok-hoon rằng cô vừa ngủ với một người đàn ông khác. Giận phát điên, Deok-hoon quyết định bỏ In-ha nhưng lại sớm nhận ra rằng anh không thể sống thiếu cô. Deok-hoon chỉ còn biết ngậm bồ hòn làm ngọt mà cho phép In-ah được gặp bất kỳ người đàn ông nào cô thích, thậm chí cả khi đã kết hôn. Sau khi lập gia đình với In-ah, Deok-hoon sống vô cùng hạnh phúc vì cô không chỉ là một đầu bếp cừ khôi mà còn là một fan bóng đá cuồng nhiệt giống anh. Rồi một lần nữa, In-ah lại tỏ ý muốn lấy một người đàn ông khác nhưng cũng không muốn ly hôn với Deok-hoon vì cô yêu cả hai người. Hết thuyết phục rồi lại đe dọa, ông chồng tội nghiệp cuối cùng cũng đành phải chấp thuận. Thế là In-ah sống với người chồng mới từ thứ 2 đến thứ 6 và dành 2 ngày cuối tuần cho Deok-hoon. Cuộc “hôn nhân kép” này mang lại hạnh phúc cho người vợ nhưng cũng khiến cho người chồng đau khổ tột cùng.

Dựa trên cuốn tiểu thuyết ăn khách cùng tên xuất bản năm 2006 của nhà văn Park Hyun-wook, bộ phim “Vợ tôi lấy chồng” gây ra rất nhiều tranh cãi tại Hàn Quốc, nơi pháp luật không cho phép chế độ đa phu hoặc đa thê. Người vợ trong phim đã phá vỡ khuôn khổ xã hội truyền thống khi cùng lúc chung sống với hai người đàn ông để tìm kiếm tình yêu và hạnh phúc đích thực. Đây là mẫu nhân vật lần đầu tiên xuất hiện trong lịch sử điện ảnh cũng như xã hội Hàn Quốc. Diễn viên Sohn Ye-jin đã lột cả các sắc diện tình cảm của nhân vật một cách xuất sắc và thuyết phục đến nỗi chính các ông chồng khi xem phim cũng phải đồng cảm với In-ah. Bộ phim nhận được nhiều lời khen ngợi của các nhà phê bình điện ảnh khi xới lên một vấn đề hoàn toàn mới liên quan tới thiết chế hôn nhân truyền thống.

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It all started with football. Deok-hoon falls in love with In-ah who shares his love and passion for the sports. They quickly become lovers and he proposes. She refuses at first but they are eventually happily married. Marriage is like a dream until one day In-ah declares her wish to marry another man. She doesn’t want divorce as she loves Deok-hoon all the same, only change is that she loves the new man as much. Leaving Deok-hoon who finds himself unable to leave In-ah in the middle, she goes ahead and marries her new man. And so the bizarre bigamy begins.

How has My Wife Got Married impacted you?

Phim my wife got married review năm 2024

Cast

Phim my wife got married review năm 2024

Noh Deok-hoon

Kim Joo-hyuk

Phim my wife got married review năm 2024

Phim my wife got married review năm 2024

Phim my wife got married review năm 2024

Phim my wife got married review năm 2024

bar customer

Yun Yeong-keol

Phim my wife got married review năm 2024

Jae-kyeong's mother

Son Hee-soon

More about My Wife Got Married

LanguagesKorean


Release date23 October 2008


DirectorsChong Yun-su



TMDB Rating5.6


Runtime119 mins

My Wife Got Married is a Drama film directed by Chong Yun-su and starring Kim Joo-hyuk and Son Ye-jin. It has a runtime of 119 minutes and a medium TMDB audience rating of 5.6 from 15 votes.

Squeezing into a busy subway carriage, Deok-hyun (Kim Ju-hyuk) comes face to face a former female work colleague, In-ah (Son Ye-jin), whom he had a major crush on when they worked together. On going for a drink to catch up on old times, they discover that they both have a passion for football (In-ah being a Barcelona fan, Deok-hyun a Real follower) and, almost instantly, Deok-hyun's former feelings are reignited. To his surprise, when the bar closes, In-ah takes him back to her flat for a coffee and, inevitably, they end up sleeping together - thus beginning an ongoing love affair. Over time, Deok-hyun repeatedly tries to convince In-ah to marry him and despite her initial, and repeated, refusals, she eventually relents and the two lovers are wed. However, blissful though their married life appears, a spanner is thrown in the works when In-ah confesses that she loves someone else. Except, she doesn’t want a divorce, but instead wants to marry him too…

Review:

Films which feature a reversal of the stereotypical male/female roles within a relationship have become fairly common in South Korean cinema over the last few years, not least in romantic comedies, and such is the case in My Wife Got Married: In-ah is a strong, confident woman who knows exactly what she wants and, more importantly, what she doesn't. She enjoys sex and is in no way bashful about admitting it, having it or talking about it but, while ongoing (and loving) relationships are important to her, she refuses to allow anyone to simply assume that she belongs to them, and fully believes that love and commitment can exist in more than one relationship at the same time.

Conversely, Deok-hyun is, without doubt, a product of his generation and upbringing. A passive, and rather neurotic, man, he firmly believes the ideals which have been instilled in him throughout his life - find a soul mate, fall in love, get married, settle down and raise a family - and, as such, he simply can't understand (and finds it hard to believe) In-ah's claims that it is possible to love more than one person and commit wholly, and equally, to both. In-ah's strength of character and determination to do whatever brings her pleasure is a constant source of angst to him, with her regular bouts of staying out late, drinking, and constantly turning off her phone, instantly, and repeatedly, leading him to assume that there can be no explanation other than that she is having an affair (even before she brings up the subject of polygamy), and his monogamous nature, combined with his lack of self-confidence, result in him constantly fearing that he is losing her and that sooner, rather than later, he is likely to get dumped for another man. As a result, his noticeable double standards (he finds In-ah's not wearing a bra sexy before they begin dating, but chastises her for it during their relationship; he sees male friends, and family members, having adulterous affairs and, though it is clear that he doesn't agree with them, he is able (to a degree) to chalk them up to "Well, it happens", while going almost insane when he thinks that In-ah is doing the same, etc.) clearly also play a part in his increasing desperation to convince In-ah to marry him but, to his dismay, that not only fails to sort his problems and ease his fears, but actually multiplies them, almost exponentially.

While a fairly straightforward discussion of monogamy vs. polygamy may initially appear to be the chewy centre of this warm and funny romantic treat, My Wife Got Married is as much a critique of the differing expectations placed on wives and husbands by Korean society, and the respective etiquette each is routinely expected to follow. In-ah and Deok-hyun keep any mention of polygamy from even close relatives (In-ah because she feels it's no-one else's business; and Deok-hyun rather more because of his fear of what others will think, and even embarrassment, to a degree) and, as such, their relationship and marriage is seen by those around them as an ideal to be aspired to. As the details of other adulterous liaisons of (male) family members and friends are brought into the light of day, My Wife Got Married contrasts outside perceptions of In-Ah and Deok-hyun's, seemingly, perfect marriage (and Deok-hyun's feelings about what's really going on) with the reactions to the illicit affairs of other husbands, and deftly points an accusing finger directly at Korean society's patriarchal nature - most noticeably in Deok-hyun's mother almost taking the side of one of Deok-hyun's male relatives (when she finds out that he has been unfaithful to his wife), rather than perceiving him as simply being the guilty party.

Aside from the themes and underlying commentary present in My Wife Got Married, the film presents itself as a gently amusing, quirky romance. The ongoing football references and analogies within Deok-hyun and In-ah's relationship work well throughout and though there are no truly laugh-out-loud moments, they really aren't part of the film's remit anyway. It does have to be said that the warmth and success of the humour, and also the believability both of In-ah's polygamist nature and the fallout it causes, are largely thanks to the performances of Son Ye-jin and Kim Ju-hyuk, with a noticeable chemistry between the two drawing viewers further into caring about the characters and the final outcome in their relationship. The one area of My Wife Got Married which would have benefitted from being tightened up is the pacing, especially in the second half of the film where it slows noticeably, with too much time spent cycling over one particular turn of events in the plot, and over Deok-hyun's repeated attempts to ascertain the truth of the situation. Thankfully, towards the latter stages of the film, the pacing of the plot returns to close to its original level and, by the time the film's conclusion draws near, My Wife Got Married is largely able to re-engage viewers' attention.

Cast:

Son Ye-jin, as In-ah, gives easily the best performance of all the cast in My Wife Got Married - so much so, in fact, that she deservedly won the Best Leading Actress award for the role at the 29th Blue Dragon Film Awards in 2008. Her portrayal of the head-strong, sexy and full of life character of In-ah is note-perfect throughout and, combined with Kim Ju-hyuk's performance as Deok-hyun, ensures that Deok-hyun's inability to deny In-ah whatever she wants is not only understandable, but also completely and utterly believable throughout the entire running time of the film. Kim Ju-hyuk may never quite reach as accomplished a level as Son Ye-jin, in his portrayal of Deok-hyun, but he does come pretty close on a number of occasions, ably showing each of Deok-hyun's insecurities, neuroses and paranoia without ever over-stating or over-playing the part.

Summary:

On the surface, a discussion of monogamy vs. polygamy, My Wife Got Married also serves as a critique, and inversion, of stereotypical male/female roles in relationships, all wrapped up within a gently humourous (albeit, erratically paced) romantic tale.

Starring:

Son Ye-jin, Kim Ju-hyuk, Joo Sang-wook, Cheon Seong-hun, Oh Woo-jeong, Son Hee-seon, Kim Byeong-chun, Yun Yeong-keol