As a movie lover in John Hughes and other filmmakers like him, I was trained since childhood and expected high school to be full of prototypes: bullies, popular kids, Jox, nerds, humor and humorous and rude institutional figures. We’ve developed since then (at least a little bit), but now there are some things in 80s movies that are still fun, even by today’s standards, some characters and plot details can feel problematic or downright stupid.
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When I noticed the new Netflix The original movie “Love Without Entanglement” is popular around the world on the platform Top 10 List, I know I need to shoot as a lifelong fan of teen movies. Love Untanged is a high school romance in 1998 and has all the characters above each other, then some characters.
this Movie log line Explained that this is “19-year-old Park SE-RI, who plans to figure out her long hair before a life-changing confession while tangling with transfer student Hanyun.” From this description, I think the movie would be a bit like not being able to buy my love – the protagonist cooks a plan to get the affection of a popular child – in some ways, it’s. But I also hope it will stay on the lighter, tinier side. After all, the crux of the movie is about the teenager’s untamed hair and how it affects her love life, but the film is much more depth than you might expect, and the complexity and dark storyline offset the more interesting aspects of the movie.
Park Se-Ri (Shin eun-soo) blames her clumsy hair on her unfortunate love. Se-Ri is a twin, and the unfair reality is that her sister has smooth hair and grabs her boyfriend without any difficulty. Meanwhile, Se-Ri is hiding in the bathroom, trying to manage her mane for hours, blaming her hair for all her problems.
Se-Ri is very obsessed with Hyun, the biggest big guy in the school, and will do everything he can to make him like her. But, unfortunately, her big hair means he will never fall in love with her – at least not because of social rules. Se-Ri and her friends become a new child at school, quiet and reserved Han Yun (Han Yun-seok) (Yu Myoung), and when Se-Ri learns that Yun-Seok’s mother is a hairstylist, she comfortably accompanys his mom, hoping she can get a deal for service so that she can look cute and impressed and impressed Hyun.
Even though Se-Ri is doing everything she can to attract Hyun’s eyes, the real relationship she forms with Yun-Seok becomes the real romance of the film. Shin Eun-soo is instantly as cute as Se-Ri, full of life, charm and adventure. She is the exact opposite of Yun-Seok, who rarely speaks, but when he does it, it’s pure honesty and heart. These young actors elevate the film from sometimes stupid, shallow teen romance to something more, especially when the theme gets darker after the movie, we learn how Yun-Seok and his mother get to town. Although the first half of the film focuses on Se-Ri’s romantic Higgs, the gravity of his family’s condition begins as Yun-Seok’s backstory becomes the focus.
Love’s unquestionable attention to Se-Ri’s hair seems almost unfair. While this may start the initial events of the movie to start moving, not only that. The film captures the happiness of high school obsession (spoilers: the ending that does lead to happiness), and the film wins the top ten. This is pure, heart-warming magic.