London Film Festival Review: ‘The House of Us’ is an utter delight

Published by
Share

It’s no wonder kids find us adults so baffling so much of the time. After all, even us curmudgeonly critics once were children, accepting the world for what it was, rather than bemoaning it for what it wasn’t. If, given the right stimuli, we’re most of us all too ready to revert back to a childhood which then seemed to stretch ahead endlessly and now seems to have passed far too quickly, it’s strange how many filmmakers get depictions of childhood as wrong as they do. They pander, they condescend, they wonder what life must be like from all the way down there, rather than actually adjusting their perspective to see that life down there really isn’t all that different from life up here. Different priorities, different responsibilities, but the same sun shines down through the same atmosphere into the same world no matter what your height, no matter what your age. In her first feature, 2016’s The World of Us, Yoon Ga Eun presented that same world from the perspective of her young protagonist; its simple verisimilitude and piercing compassion were confirmation of a bona fide humanist auteur par excellence arriving on the scene. Now, she returns with The House of Us – similar in title, similar in tone, similar in theme, and similar in quality.

Young Hana, on the cusp of adolescence, discovers a haven of youthful innocence in a couple of younger girls living nearby during her summer holidays; her home life is in turmoil, and Hana’s attempts at building bridges between her quarreling family members are largely ignored. Her new friends, sisters Yoo Mi and Yoo Jin, are only 9 and 7, respectively, and present an easier challenge for Hana to manage – her older family members need a sensible mind to guide them through their troubles, but Hana’s natural authority over Yoo Mi and Yoo Jin in her advanced age acts as a neat trial for the inevitably more complex one to come in reconciling her elder family members. Through fine, stable handling of simple, trustworthy dramaturgical technique, Yoon constructs a scenario that feels freshly hewn from the very fabric of reality and puts it to an ideal purpose. She’s exploring the life of an average child here, as before in The World of Us, and effectively setting out her explorations as a standard for depictions of childhood on screen. It’s that radical, despite its apparently conservative style and accessible tone – rarely if ever before has any filmmaker achieved something as successful in its unpretentious earnestness on such a topic.

Indeed, in a mere two movies to date, I can state as conclusively as anyone could that Yoon Ga Eun is one of cinema’s all-time great directors of actors. The House of Us‘ three leading ladies deliver performances of such unforced, spontaneous sincerity that it almost breaks through the movie’s soft, glossy, professional aesthetic and suggests fly-on-the-wall documentary at times; all three, however, are also perfectly capable of every emotional fluctuation demanded by the narrative, whose progression is aided immeasurably by their collective contribution. As it slips through minor, always credible modulations, their impact is magnified due to the impact evidenced on the faces of these extraordinary young performers. Yoon’s style is free of affectation, indulging only in delicate little expressions such as smartly developing costume choices for her leads; she builds everything around her cast, draws focus to their characters and their story and allows it to resonate to its fullest extent. See, kids? We do remember what it’s like to be young! We just need Yoon Ga Eun to remind us!

This review is from the 2019 BFI London Film Festival.

Paddy Mulholland

Paddy Mulholland is a 28-year-old movie blogger originally from Belfast, Northern Ireland, now living in London, England, where he’s currently studying for a BA(Hons) in Journalism. He first got into movies 15 years ago, and loves nothing better than sitting front row at a press screening of a movie he knows he’ll probably never get a chance to see again. He also enjoys the queerest of queer culture, eating way too much, and being a dirtbag on Twitter.

Recent Posts

84th Peabody Awards Winners: ‘Fellow Travelers,’ ‘Jury Duty,’ ’20 Days of Mariupol’ and More

Showtime's Fellow Travelers, Amazon Freevee's Jury Duty and the Oscar-winning 20 Days of Mariupol were… Read More

May 10, 2024

Academy Launches $500M Global Diversification and Outreach Program for 100th Oscars and Beyond

In honor of the 100th Oscars ceremony in 2028, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and… Read More

May 10, 2024

Sebastian Stan and Lily James to Reunite for Psychological Thriller ‘Let the Evil Go West’

Star Thrower Entertainment, Gramercy Park Media and north.five.six. announced today that Emmy-nominated Sebastian Stan (Pam… Read More

May 9, 2024

Director Watch Ep. 45 – ‘On the Rocks’ (Sofia Coppola, 2020)

Welcome to Director Watch! On this AwardsWatch podcast, co-hosts Ryan McQuade and Jay Ledbetter attempt… Read More

May 9, 2024

77th Edinburgh International Film Festival will Open with the UK Premiere of Nora Fingscheidt’s ‘The Outrun’ Starring Saoirse Ronan

The Festival also announces its shorts competition will be titled The Thelma Schoonmaker Prize for Short… Read More

May 9, 2024

This website uses cookies.