Wendy Ide 

By the Stream review – gentle college comedy of manners from Hong Sang-soo

The Korean director applies his languid style to the tale of a college campus coping with the arrival of a famous visitor
  
  

three actors in a scene from By the Stream.
‘Musing on the creative act’: Kwon Hae-hyo, Kim Min-hee and Cho Yun-hee in By the Stream. Photograph: PR

The latest from the prolific South Korean film-maker Hong Sang-soo may feel familiar to fans of the director’s lo-fi work. Long, well-lubricated nights of soju drinking and oversharing captured by long, watchful mid-shots figure prominently here, as they do in most of Hong’s pictures.

It remains an effective formula: By the Stream is a wry comedy of manners that muses, in its unassuming way, on the creative act. After a minor scandal among her students, artist and lecturer Jeonim (Kim Min-hee) recruits her slightly famous actor uncle (Kwon Hae-hyo) to direct a skit for a college show. But the uncle brings with him his own notoriety, which upsets the delicate equilibrium of the women’s college.

Watch a trailer for By the Stream.
  • In UK and Irish cinemas

 

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