Geugeotmani nae sesang

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Sinopsis(1)

A welterweight WBC Asian champion in his heyday, Jo-ha is down on his luck and has nowhere to go. He makes ends meet by sparring for other boxers and by distributing flyers on the streets. One day, he accidentally reunites with his mother In-sook for the first time in 17 years and moves in with her. There, he meets his unexpected half-brother Jin-tae, whom he didn’t know existed. Although he has level 2 autism, Jin-tae cooks ramen incredibly well, plays video games like no other, and is a savant when it comes to playing the piano. Jo-ha isn’t too fond of his new brother, who always responds to his questions with a simple ‘yup’. But in order to put together some money to move abroad, he has to help out around the house and get to know him… (CJ Entertainment)

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Reseñas (1)

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inglés On paper, tear-jerking to the point of absurdity. It proudly burrows into every conceivable cliché from films about bonding broken families, finding one's way to a brilliant autistic man, letting go, forgiveness, and, to make matters worse, some clichés from sports and music films as well. And it's bloody generic. What is unbelievable, though, is that, despite the aforementioned hodgepodge, it doesn't slip for a moment into the waters of first-rate pandering at all costs, where you feel that the director is cheaply manipulating you. It touches on it "casually", slowly step by step, or rather, tear after tear through the characters instead of the blows of fate and big emotions. But it gets under the skin all the more, and during all the piano scenes in the second half it clears the tear ducts like few things do. ()

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