Wedding Campaign
Wedding Campaign
| 23 November 2005 (USA)
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A 38-year-old single man, Hong Man-Taek is a petty farmer still living with his mother. Seeing a neighbor married to an Uzbekistan bride and frightened by the fact that his own grandson will never get married, Man-Taek's grandfather decides to send Man-tek to Uzbekistan to find a bride.

Reviews
Scanialara

You won't be disappointed!

Dorathen

Better Late Then Never

FuzzyTagz

If the ambition is to provide two hours of instantly forgettable, popcorn-munching escapism, it succeeds.

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InformationRap

This is one of the few movies I've ever seen where the whole audience broke into spontaneous, loud applause a third of the way in.

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refresh daemon

Wedding Campaign was a fairly popular Corean film from 2005; a story about two bachelor late 30's country bumpkins. The nice one of the two, very awkward with women, gets pressure from his mother and grandfather to get married and ends up getting set up to go to a matchmaking service in Uzbekistan, mirroring a real life issue in Corea, where young women tend to flee the country for the city, leaving the remaining (mostly male) farmer population without prospective spouses. Consequently, out-of-country matchmaking services have started popping up, setting up these farmers with women from struggling countries.In this story, the more wily of the two convinces the nicer of the two to go to Uzbekistan to court women from the Koryo-people population there (ethnically Corean, having migrated out of Corea hundreds of years ago), from a sketchy matchmaking service there. However, our nice farmer becomes smitten by his translator, who has problems of her own. The movie from there on progresses fairly predictably, but not joylessly, so it's a watchable, even if it's not a particularly impressive affair. Not all of the character development is particularly believable and sometimes seems a little rushed, but the film is too good natured to hate either. Unfortunately, the structure of the film includes a long intro where precious little happens, but we get to learn about our characters in depth--this may turn off more Hollywood acclimated viewers as it doesn't move too quickly.One of the things that I really liked about Wedding Campaign is its photography of Uzbekistan, having been shot on location for most of it. The actors are congenial and none of them try to be "the star", but rather play their parts well with the supporting comic characters doing well in their parts. Technically, the film works very well, as typical of Corean productions.Overall, I wasn't impressed with Wedding Campaign, but I wasn't offended either. It's small charms are enjoyable enough for those who'd witness it, but it's not a compelling case for a "must watch." I doubt that you'd regret watching it, however, so if you're in the mood for a fairly light-hearted Uzbekistan set Corean romantic comedy, this is pretty much the only game in time. And it won't leave a bad taste in your mouth either. 7/10.

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OCOKA

My Wedding Campaign, or "Naui gyeolhon wonjeonggi" in Korean, is a tremendously compelling and touching story of a 38-year-old modern-day South Korean bachelor farmer named Hong Man-taek, who like many other young bachelor farmers in Korea's rapidly aging countryside today, has everything -- except a wife.As a sheepish, bumbling and socially inept stammerer, with an impossibly shy and tongue-tied demeanor, he decides, at the urging of his grandfather to go to "Uzoo-beckist" -- Uzbekistan -- because as his best friend reminds him, "When there aren't enough, you import!" As can be expected though, things quickly go awry for Mantaek and his buddy in Uzbekistan, especially when farmer Hong finds himself haplessly, yet steadily growing in love with his translator and facilitator, a North Korean defector fluent in Russian and Korean named Kim Lara (played by the beautiful Su Ae). The attraction between these two is essentially unspoken, yet unmistakable, and becomes steadlily more pronounced as each of Mantaek's dates with Korean-Uzbeki girls fall apart, and as Man-taek becomes more and more taken with Lara's assertive yet vulnerable personality, which reminds him of his mother.A full 27 minutes into the movie, the story begins with Mantaek narrating in the past perfect, as he and his grandfather sit atop a Korean hill overlooking the farming valley that he and his family have worked for generations. The next scene takes Mantaek halfway across the world to the steppes of Uzbekistan, as he inauspiciously intones:"...the beginning was humble, but the end was prosperous." Oh yes, indeed.Once in Uzbekistan, and after the first of several failed meetings with prospective Korean-Uzbeki brides, Mantaek realizes how far he is from their ideal, and yearns for someone with a similar background. Lara, who is originally from Sinuiju City in North Korea, unwittingly fits the bill. While hardly the image of a modern, cosmopolitan Uzbeki woman, which Mantaek cannot relate to anyhow, Lara is essentially a country girl, and is therefore, the ideal type for Mantak both figuratively and literally. And while Lara finds herself exasperated with Mantaek's country bumpkin mannerisms and dullness, she is drawn to his down-to-earth earnestness and simplicity, which her life is devoid of.Although unspoken, their pairing is indicative of "Nam-Nam, Buk- Nyeo", ideal, which is an old Korean proverb meaning that the best pairings are "men from the South" (like Mantaek) and "women from the North" like Lara. It is also a metaphor for reunification between the two Koreas.Their budding love, however, is star-crossed, as several different elements conspire to prevent it from taking off, including Lara's unscrupulous Korean-Uzbeki boss, who holds the keys to her freedom in the form of a forged South Korean passport, the jilted Korean-Uzbeki girl who was initially set up with Mantaek but whom Mantaek rejects, and the Uzbeki police with their crackdown of possible terrorists via random passport checks. (Lara is an illegal alien who has overstayed her work visa. If caught, she faces deportation back to North Korea.)Although Mantaek is not fully aware of Lara's predicament, he remains devoted to her throughout their time together, and while she parries his initial expression of interest in her, she cannot forget his sacrificial act of throwing himself at two Uzbeki cops when she gets caught during a random passport check, thus allowing her to escape and survive another day.In the next scene, at the airport in Uzbekistan, we see Mantaek being deported back to South Korea by Uzbeki police and South Korean embassy officials due to his assault on the police officers the night before to save Lara, who successfully eluded the police.He is, however, surreptitiously able to catch a parting glance of Lara, who hides behind a pillar overlooking the departure terminal as she too, catches a last glimpse of the man that saved her. The only way he can reach out to her though -- without giving her away -- is by saying the only Russian expression she taught him that he remembers, which has become a kind of a code between the two: "до завтра" (Da-Zavtra), or "until tomorrow", which he butchers Korean-style to "Da japaturyu." As he repeats it over and over again behind a stream of tears in front of the bewildered Uzbekis and a sobbing Lara upstairs witnessing it all, I could barely hold back my own.With Mantaek back in his hometown, listless and fraught with loneliness and ennui while carrying out the exhausting work and mind-numbing routine of a bachelor farmer, the story takes a twist half a world away when Lara, like many North Korean defectors in real life, jumps the gate of a friendly embassy and gets political asylum.After having been notified in person by a NIS (National Intelligence Service) agent of Lara's arrival in Seoul, the very last scene is of Mantaek running through his orchard.With this final scene of him freeze-framed, we hear Mantaek's voice-over declare confidently in a steady and stutter-free voice -- resolutely and full of satisfaction -- the end of his "wedding campaign." This was -- most surprisingly and unexpectedly -- one of the most touching and profound love stories I have ever seen in my life. It literally sent my heart into my throat and had me dissolved into a blubbering mess by the end of the movie. A must see for anyone and everyone who enjoys unlikely love stories and has even a parting belief in the power of love.

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Fan Xu

Korean farmers travels to Uzbekistan to find their bride.This movie has a comedy starting, a romance and attractive progress, and a happy ending.Very relax movie, i like it.there is something about love.......this movie do have some magic to catch my mind.I don't know so much about love.......(i'm sorry, never mind).this movie show love in a Asia-way(sorry for my poor English, this Asia-way is my way), relax but meaning.after seen this movie, i would say : how beautiful Korean farms, i almost wish i could be a farmer, never say never, i could be a farmer ,with a fantastic farm.........lastly, don't forget the Korean mixed-rice using rock hollowware.

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