Love Fiction
Love Fiction is a 2012 South Korean romantic comedy film written and directed by Jeon Kye-soo, and starring Ha Jung-woo and Gong Hyo-jin. The film was released on February 29, 2012.
Plot
Goo Joo-wol is a novelist suffering writer's block and he has not been able to write anything for the past couple of years. A hopeless romantic, he looks to find artistic inspiration in every woman he meets, but ends up only with despair and heartache. One day, his publisher asks him to come along to a book fair in Germany for a change of pace. There he meets Hee-jin, a film distributor who is there to survey the European film market at an event in Berlin. Unsurprisingly, he falls in love instantly, and upon returning to Seoul, he writes her a love letter displaying his odd sense of humor, which convinces her to go out on a date with him. As their relationship progresses, Joo-wol writes a bestselling pulp noir serial with a main character loosely based on Hee-jin. However, with this newfound popularity he begins to discover more than he would like to know about his girlfriend's complicated history with men.Cast
- Ha Jung-woo as Goo Joo-wol / Detective Ma Dong-wook
- Gong Hyo-jin as Lee Hee-jin / Kim Hae-young
- Jo Hee-bong as Publisher Kwak / Detective squad chief Kwak
- Lee Byung-joon as M
- Ji Jin-hee as Goo Joo-ro, Joo-wol's older brother
- Yoo In-na as Soo-jung / Kyung-sook
- Kim Ji-hoon as Hwang / Detective Ryu
- Seo Hyun-woo as Yi-gyu
- Choi Doo-ri as Kyung-ja
- Kwak Do-won as Director Hwang / Murdered senator
- Kim Seong-gi as Dr. Pyo
- Choi Yu-hwa as Min-ji / Veronica
- Park Young-soo as Young-shik / Director Jo
- Jo Yong-joon as Sysop
- Lee Jun-hyeok as Professor Jeong
- Kim Hye-hwa as Ma-yi
- Kim Jae-hwa as Joo-hee
- Park Joon-myun as Baek Sun-young
- Choi Won-tae as Baek Seon-il
- Kang Shin-cheol as Hee-jin's ex-husband
- Son Byung-wook as Joo-wol's high school gym coach
- Jeon Su-ji as art teacher
- Kim Hye-ji as beauty salon hairdresser
- Chi Woo as Joo-wol as a high school teen
- Yeom Hyun-seo as little girl Ye-ja
Production
This is Jeon Kye-soo's third feature film following his 2006 debut Midnight Ballad for Ghost Theater, the short film U AND ME in the 2008 omnibus If You Were Me 4, and 2010's Hong Sang-soo-style indie Lost and Found.With a background in stage and dance, Jeon said he was inspired by French director Jean-Pierre Jeunet and his 1991 film Delicatessen to become a director.
The script was completed in 2007 but Jeon couldn't find anyone to invest in the unconventional romantic comedy, largely because industry insiders considered the plot to be too difficult for the general public to understand. The script was written for Ha Jung-woo and he committed to the film from the beginning, but Jeon said, "We had this good actor Ha Jung-woo but investors changed their minds because they thought the script lacked widespread appeal and the public wouldn't like or understand it."
Jeon first met producer Eom Yong-hoon while making Midnight Ballad for Ghost Theater and the two developed a friendship. When production of Love Fiction was cancelled in 2009, Eom sold his apartment in order to launch his own production company Samgeori Pictures because he wanted to develop Jeon's script into a film.
Filming began in 2011, with Gong Hyo-jin replacing Kang Hye-jung as the leading lady. Jeon said of Ha and Gong, "They were perfect in many ways. They gave us their best in just a couple of takes. I couldn't have asked for more than that."
Explaining the puzzling name of Goo Joo-wol, Jeon said "I find the sound important. It has that sound of a character that steps out the door of his house at around 2 p.m. in his pajamas, loitering about without doing much, like a neighborhood rogue complaining about society."
Similar to the fantastical style of Cédric Klapisch's Auberge Espagnole, Joo-wol's complex inner side is displayed through conversations shared with an imaginary character 'M'. In making Joo-wol the focus, the film shows how men beg for love and quickly lose interest in their partners once they are stuck in a relationship.
Touted as a "Male Bridget Jones" and a "Korean 500 Days of Summer", the insightful love story tracks the hero's bumbling journey through modern dating, which turns out to be a lot harder than he thought. "The film is hopefully everything that a man can experience in love," said Jeon, "in two hours".