Movie news on your iPhone today!
Advertisement
Sign in
Username   Password         Forgot password?
Wanna join? Sign up
Find movies you'll love
Lies
  • 0
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • Rate this movie.

Rent it, watch it, find it

Advertisement
Directed by Jang Sun-Woo
This erotic drama follows bad boy director Jang Sun Woo's controversial Bad Movie (1997), a gritty, documentary-style look at Seoul street kids which featured such taboo themes as drug abuse, casual sex, and prostitution. Based on the banned book Tell Me a Lie by noted novelist Jang Jung Il, the film tells of the obsessive, sadomasochistic relationship between a young high school Lolita named Y (Kim Tae Yeon) and a renowned, married, 38-year-old sculptor named J (Lee Sang Hyun). Y's best friend has a crush on the sculptor but is too shy to act on it. At first, Y takes the initiative on her friend's behalf, but she soon finds herself attracted to the man. Keen to lose her virginity before graduation, Y willingly surrenders every orifice to her experienced lover. Though the post-coital conversation is warm, J is nervous about being seen with the 18-year-old Y, still considered a minor in Korea. When J reveals his proclivity for whipping, what began as a page out of Nabokov evolves into something out of the Marquis de Sade. With surprising passion and endurance, Y submits to being flogged with rubber hoses, wire hangers, and tree branches. After a three-month stay in Paris with his wife, J returns to his young mistress, now a college student. This time, J suggests that the roles be reversed. The initially reluctant Y soon lustfully takes to the role of dominant. Things get complicated when Y's conservative family gets wind of the affair, and Y's motorcycle-driving brother torches the sculptor's studio. Y withdraws from college and the two become sexual vagabonds, going from motel and motel with only a few articles of clothing and a suitcase full of flogging equipment. Though at first such hedonism seems liberating, soon insecurities, doubts, and a longing for stability creep into their bliss. Jang's confrontational, though oddly touching, film features fearless performances from first-time actors Lee Sang Hyun and especially Kim Tae Yeon, both of whom act in the buff for much of the movie. In as conservative a society as Korea, where 15 years ago a bare belly in the movies was considered racy, this film courts the same fate as Nagisa Oshima's erotic masterpiece In the Realm of the Senses (1976), which garnered critical praise abroad while never having an unexpurgated version screened domestically. This film was screened at the 1999 Toronto Film Festival. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
[More]
 
tinokievtinokiev Definitions of Art. Unclassific ...
by tinokiev in Asian Art Cinema
"Personally I often find myself trying to classify or rate a film, specially asian ones and not finding a term or a category to put it on. It is like " a wong kar wai" film. Wong Kar Wai himself is a category of his own approach to aesthetics's, or you could said a "takashi mike" film and you know you are going to expect lots " [More]
All Movie Guide Logo
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Both Nagisa Oshima's erotic masterpiece Ai no Corrida and Catherine Breillat's lugubrious Romance brought both accolades from film critics and howls of outrage from conservative groups for being among the first works to seriously look at human sexuality and to graphically depict the actual sex act. Add to this list Jang Sun Woo's Lies. A tale of an obsessive affair between a schoolgirl and a middle-aged sculptor and their shared interested in S&M, Lies features not only plenty of nudity, exotic (and apparently authentic) couplings, and bruised flesh, but perhaps the first mainstream film treatment of corprophilia. At one point, Y, the schoolgirl, breathlessly exclaims, "After you ate my [excrement], I knew that you loved me." In Ai no Corrida and Romance, both directors seemed to deal with each film's racy subject matter by approaching the story with utter sobriety. While Oshima created a world of fleeting pleasure and profound tragedy, Breillat created one of unintentional ridiculousness. Jang, however, actually dares to use wit. J and Y's first encounter -- in which Y is deflowered in every way imaginable -- is punctuated with tersely descriptive intertitles reading "First Hole" and "Second Hole." As the film progresses, J's passion for whipping inches towards farce when he collects increasingly large and weird implements for flogging. The result is an odd mix of tones -- at one moment Jang has the audience laugh at the characters while in the next he expertly evokes the same characters' pathos. Both in terms of subject matter and in geographic proximity, Lies is often compared with Ai no Corrida, yet thematically this film has much more in common with Oshima's first great work, Cruel Story of Youth. Like that groundbreaking 1960 film, Lies features a couple who gleefully transgress all cultural norms and in so doing challenge a society hidebound by obsolete traditions and weakened by mindless consumerism. Though clearly not a film for all tastes, Lies is a daring and memorable work that delves into the dark recesses of human sexuality and finds something there to laugh at. ~ Jonathan Crow, All Movie Guide
 

Community ratings

mavens
Spout mavens
haven't rated it
most people
Most people
are neutral about it.

Other opinions

paranoid_android
paranoid_android
liked it.
Puhnner
Puhnner
liked it.
tinokiev
tinokiev
lost interest.