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Cannes 2003 Oasis directed by Lee Chang-dong
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On the other hand, Gong-ju (So-ri Moon), a severely- handicapped young woman, has been abandoned in a squalid tenement by her selfish brother and his pregnant wife, who now intend to benefit from a new building for registered disabled tenants. She’s left alone, barely cared by an interested neighbor, when Jong-du first meets her. He happens to be the man who supposedly killed her father in an accident (a fact which turns out not to be true) but nevertheless an endearing, moving relationship establishes between them, despite a very disturbing beginning.
A renowned novelist turned filmmaker, 48-year-old Lee Chang-dong challenges notions of good taste as he does of social rules, revealing without any consideration the essential hypocrisy that lies under most family ties and social behavior. As Rainer Werner Fassbinder did in the seventies, Lee uses the most daring melodrama - even at the risk of being kitsch - as a means of social criticism. It’s clear that for Lee Chang-dong, fantasy called love is always harassed by the repressive forces of daily reality.
Although more distant, other echoes reverberate in Oasis: those of Gelsomina and Zampanó, the two pure, simple-minded star-crossed lovers of Federico Fellini’s classic La Strada. Like them, Gong-ju and Jong-du are able to communicate their mutual affection and understanding not necessarily with words but with their actions. And like them, they feel at odds with their environment, which looks at them as freaks. They can only rely on themselves and their dreams, as is suggested by the tapestry in Gong-ju’s apartment, representing an exotic oasis, a sort of Eden they are not allowed to enter, at least on this earth.
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