Yeong-ja's Heydays explained

Yeong-ja's Heydays
Director:Kim Ho-sun
Producer:Kim Tai-soo
Starring:Yeom Bok-sun
Song Jae-ho
Music:Jeong Sung-jo
Cinematography:Jang Seok-jun
Editing:Yoo Jae-won
Runtime:103 minutes
Country:South Korea
Language:Korean

Yeong-ja's Heydays is a 1975 South Korean film directed by Kim Ho-sun. It became a huge box office hit upon its release; it drew an audience of 360,000, surpassing the top foreign film at the time, The Sting, by 30,000.[1]

Plot

After returning from the Vietnam War, Chang-su (Song Jae-ho), who works as a scrubber at a public bath, runs into Yeong-ja (Yeom Bok-sun) in a police station. Three years previously, Chang-su was a laborer at an iron foundry. He met Yeong-ja at his boss's house, where she worked as a housemaid. He fell in love with the innocent and kindhearted Yeong-ja, and proposed to her before leaving for Vietnam. However, while he was gone, Yeong-ja was sexually assaulted by the boss's scoundrel son, and then kicked out of the house.

Wishing to live an upstanding life, she got a job at a garment factory, but her paltry wages were not enough to make ends meet. She even tried working in a bar at a friend's recommendation, but the work did not suit her. Yeong-ja became a conductor on a bus, only to lose one of her arms in a traffic accident with no other means to support herself she becomes a prostitute.

Reuniting with her for the first time in three years, Chang-su is shocked to discover that she is living an armless life with no hope or prospects. He pours all his care into saving her, including making her an artificial arm, but she leaves him for the sake of his future.

Several more years pass. Chang-su discovers Yeong-ja's whereabouts and goes to her house. When he sees that she is living a happy life with her husband (Lee Soon-jae), who also has a disability, and their child, he wishes her happiness and departs.[2] [3]

Cast

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Yeong-Ja's Heydays (Yeongja-ui jeonseongsidae) (1975). Korean Film Archive. 2014-06-03.
  2. Web site: Film: Yeong-ja's Heydays. Asia Society. 2014-06-03.
  3. Web site: Review: Young-ja's Heydays, 1975. Seoul Streets. 2014-06-03. 3 July 2012.